For some time the little village of
Meer slept quietly in the moonlight. There was
not a sound to break the stillness, except once when
Mother Van Hove’s old rooster caught a glimpse
of the waning moon through the window of the chicken-house,
and crowed lustily, thinking it was the sun.
The other roosters of the village, wiser than he, made
no response to his call, and in a moment he, too, returned
to his interrupted slumbers. But though there
was as yet no sound to tell of their approach, the
moon looked down upon three horsemen galloping over
the yellow ribbon of road from Malines toward the little
village. Soon the sound of the horses’
hoofs beating upon the hardened earth throbbed through
the village itself, and Fidel sat up on the kitchen
doorstep, pricked up his ears, and listened.
He heard the hoof-beats and awakened the echoes with
a sharp bark.
Mother Van Hove sat up in bed and
listened; another dog barked, and another, and now
she, too, heard the hoof-beats. Nearer they came,
and nearer, and now she could hear a voice shouting.
She shook her husband. “Wake up!”
she whispered in his ear, “something is wrong!
Fidel barks, and I hear strange noises about.
Wake up!”
“Fidel is crazy,” said
Father Van Hove sleepily. “He thinks some
weasel is after the chickens very likely. Fidel
will attend to it. Go to sleep.”
He sank back again upon his pillows,
but his wife seized his arm and pulled him up.
“Listen!” she said.
“Oh, listen! Weasels do not ride on horseback!
There are hoof-beats on the road!”
“Some neighbor returning late
from Malines,” said Father Van Hove, yawning.
“It does not concern us.”
But his wife was already out of bed,
and at the window. The horsemen were now plainly
visible, riding like the wind, and as they whirled
by the houses their shout thrilled through the quiet
streets of the village: “Burghers, awake!
Awake! Awake!”
Wide awake at last, Father Van Hove
sprang out of bed and hastily began putting down his
clothes. His wife was already nearly dressed,
and had lighted a candle. Other lights sparkled
from the windows of other houses. Suddenly the
bell in the church-steeple began to ring wildly, as
though it, too, were shaken with a sudden terror.
“It must be a fire,” said Father Van Hove.
Still fastening her clothing, his
wife ran out of the door and looked about in every
direction. “I see no fire,” she said,
“but the village street is full of people running
to the square! Hurry! Hurry! We must
take the children with us; they must not be left here
alone.”
She ran to wake the children, as she
spoke, and, helped by her trembling fingers, they,
too, were soon dressed, and the four ran together
up the road toward the village church. The bell
still clanged madly from the steeple, and the vibrations
seemed to shake the very flesh of the trembling children
as they clung to their mother’s hands and tried
to keep up with their father’s rapid strides.
They found all the village gathered
in front of the little town-hall. On its steps
stood the Burgomeister and the village priest, and
near them, still sitting astride his foam-flecked
steed, was one of the soldiers who had brought the
alarm. His two companions were already far beyond
Meer, flying over the road to arouse the villages which
lay farther to the east. The church-bell suddenly
ceased its metallic clatter, and while its deep tones
still throbbed through the night air, the wondering
and frightened people crowded about the steps in breathless
suspense.
The Burgomeister raised his hand.
Even in the moonlight it could be seen that he was
pale. He spoke quickly. “Neighbors,”
he said, “there is bad news! the German army
is on our borders! It is necessary for every
man of military age and training to join the colors
at once in case the army is needed for defense.
There is not a moment to lose. This messenger
is from headquarters. He will tell you what you
are to do.”
The soldier now spoke for the first
time. “Men of Belgium,” he cried,
“your services are needed for your country and
your King! The men of Meer are to report at once
to the army headquarters at Malines. Do not stop
even to change your clothing! We are not yet at
war, and our good King Albert still hopes to avert
it by an armed peace, but the neutrality of Belgium
is at stake, and we must be ready to protect it at
any cost, and at an instant’s notice. Go
at once to the Brussels gate of Malines. An officer
will meet you there and tell you what to do.
I must ride on to carry the alarm to Putte.”
He wheeled his horse as he spoke, and, turning in
his saddle, lifted his sword and cried, “Vive
lé Roi!”
“Vive lé Roi!
Vive la Belgique!” came in an answering shout
from the people of Meer, and he was gone.
There was a moment of stunned silence
as he rode away; then a sound of women weeping.
The Burgomeister came down from the steps of the town-hall,
said farewell to his wife and children, and took his
place at the head of the little group of men which
was already beginning form in marching order.
The priest moved about among his people with words
of comfort.
Father Van Hove turned to his wife,
and to Jan and Marie, who were clinging to her skirts.
“It is only a bad dream, my little ones,”
he said, patting their heads tenderly; “we shall
wake up some day. And you, my wife, do not despair!
I shall soon return, no doubt! Our good King
will yet save us from war. You must finish the
harvest alone-but-” “Fall
in!” cried the voice of the Burgomeister, and
Father Van Hove kissed his wife and children and stepped
forward.
Mother Van Hove bravely checked her
rising sobs. “We shall go with you to Malines,
at any rate,” she said firmly. And as the
little group of men started forward along the yellow
road, she and many more women and children of the
village marched, away with them in the gray twilight
which precedes the coming of the dawn. The priest
went with his people, praying for them as he walked,
in a voice that shook with feeling.
The sky was red in the east and the
larks were already singing over the quiet fields when
the men of Meer, followed by their wives and children,
presented themselves at the Brussels gate of the city.