When they could no longer see Granny,
nor hear Fidel, the children sat down on a coil of
rope behind the cabin and felt very miserable indeed.
Marie was just turning up the corner of her apron to
wipe her eyes, and Jan was looking at nothing at all
and winking very hard, when good Mother De Smet, came
by with a baby waddling along on each side of her.
She gave the two dismal little faces a quick glance
and then said kindly:
“Jan, you run and see if you
can’t help Father with the tiller, and, Marie,
would you mind playing with the babies while I put
on the soup-kettle and fix the greens for dinner?
They are beginning to climb everywhere now, and I
am afraid they will fall overboard if somebody doesn’t
watch them every minute!”
Jan clattered at once across the deck
to Father De Smet, and Marie gladly followed his wife
to the open space in front of the cabin where the
babies had room to roll about. Half an hour later,
when Mother De Smet went back to get some potatoes
for the soup, she found Jan proudly steering the boat
by himself.
“Oh, my soul!” she cried
in astonishment. “What a clever boy you
must be to learn so quickly to handle the tiller.
Where is Father De Smet?”
“Here!” boomed a loud
voice behind her, and Father De Smet’s head
appeared above a barrel on the other side of the deck.
“I’m trying to make the ‘Old Woman’
look as if she had no cargo aboard. If the Germans
see these potatoes, they’ll never let us get
them to Antwerp,” he shouted.
“Sh-h-h! You mustn’t
talk so loud,” whispered Mother De Smet.
“You roar like a foghorn on a dark night.
The Germans won’t have any trouble in finding
out about the potatoes if you shout the news all over
the landscape.”
Father De Smet looked out over the quiet Belgian fields.
“There’s nobody about
that I can see,” he said, “but I’ll
roar more gently next time.”
There was a bend in the river just
at this point, and Jan, looking fearfully about to
see if he could see any Germans, for an instant forgot
all about the tiller. There was a jerk on the
tow-rope and a bump as the nose of the “Old
Woman” ran into the river-bank. Netteke,
the mule, came to a sudden stop, and Mother De Smet
sat down equally suddenly on a coil of rope.
Her potatoes spilled over the deck, while a wail from
the front of the boat announced that one of the babies
had bumped, too. Mother De Smet picked herself
up and ran to see what was the matter with the baby,
while Father De Smet seized a long pole and hurried
forward. Joseph left the mule to browse upon the
grass beside the tow-path and ran back to the boat.
His father threw him a pole which was kept for such
emergencies, and they both pushed. Joseph pushed
on the boat and his father pushed against the river-bank.
Meanwhile poor Jan stood wretchedly by the tiller knowing
that his carelessness had caused the trouble, yet
not knowing what to do to help.
“Never mind, son,” said
Mother De Smet kindly, when she came back for her
potatoes and saw his downcast face. “It
isn’t the first time the ‘Old Woman’
has stuck her nose in the mud, and with older people
than you at the tiller, too! We’ll soon
have her off again and no harm done.”
The boat gave a little lurch toward
the middle of the stream.
“Look alive there, Mate!”
sang out Father De Smet. “Hard aport with
the tiller! Head her out into the stream!”
Joseph flung his pole to his father
and rushed back to Netteke, pulled her patient nose
out of a delicious bunch of thistles and started her
up the tow-path. Jan sprang to the tiller, and
soon the “Old Woman” was once more gliding
smoothly over the quiet water toward Antwerp.
When Father De Smet came back to the
stern of the boat, Jan expected a scolding, but perhaps
it seemed to the good-natured skipper that Jan had
troubles enough already, for he only said mildly, “Stick
to your job, son, whatever it is,” and went
on covering his potatoes with empty boxes and pieces
of sailcloth. Jan paid such strict attention to
the tiller after that that he did not even forget
when Father De Smet pointed out a burning farmhouse
a mile or so from the river and said grimly, “The
Germans are amusing themselves again.”
For the most part, however, the countryside
seemed so quiet and peaceful that it was hard to believe
that such dreadful things were going on all about
them. While Father De Smet’s eyes, under
their bushy brows, kept close watch in every direction,
he said little about his fears and went on his way
exactly as he had done before the invasion.
It was quite early in the morning
when they left Boom, and by ten o’clock Joseph
was tired of trudging along beside Netteke. He
hailed his father.
“May I come aboard now?” he shouted.
Father De Smet looked at Jan.
“Would you like to drive the mule awhile?”
he asked.
“Oh, wouldn’t I!” cried Jan.
“Have you ever driven a mule before?”
Father De Smet asked again.
“Not a mule, exactly,”
Jail replied, “but I drove old Pier up from the
field with a load of wheat all by myself. Mother
sat on the load.”
“Come along!” shouted
Father De Smet to Joseph, and in a moment the gangplank
was out and Jan and Joseph had changed places.
“May I go, too?” asked
Marie timidly of Father De Smet as he was about to
draw in the plank. “The babies are both
asleep and I have nothing to do.”
Father De Smet took a careful look
in every direction. It was level, open country
all about them, dotted here and there with farmhouses,
and in the distance the spire of a village church
rose above the clustering houses and pointed to the
sky.
“Yes, yes, child. Go ahead,”
said Father De Smet. “Only don’t get
too near Netteke’s hind legs. She doesn’t
know you very well and sometimes she forgets her manners.”
Marie skipped over the gangplank and
ran along the tow-path to Jan, who already had taken
up Netteke’s reins and was waiting for the signal
to start. Joseph took his place at the tiller,
and again the “Old Woman” moved slowly
down the stream.
For some time Jan and Marie plodded
along with Netteke. At first they thought it
good fun, but by and by, as the sun grew hot, driving
a mule on a tow-path did not seem quite so pleasant
a task as they had thought it would be.
“I’m tired of this,”
said Jan at last to Marie. “That mule is
so slow that I have to sight her by something to be
sure that she is moving at all! I’ve been
measuring by that farmhouse across the river for a
long time, and she hasn’t crawled up to it yet!
I shouldn’t wonder if she’d go to sleep
some day and fall into the river and never wake up!
Why, I am almost asleep myself.”
“She’ll wake up fast enough
when it’s time to eat, and so will you,”
said Marie, with profound wisdom.
“Let ’s see if we can’t
make her go a little faster, anyway,” said Jan,
ignoring Marie’s remark. “I know what
I’ll do,” he went on, chuckling; “I’ll
get some burrs and stick them in her tail, and then
every time she slaps the flies off she’ll make
herself go faster.”
Marie seized Jan’s arm.
“You’ll do nothing of
the kind!” she cried. “Father De Smet
told me especially to keep away from Netteke’s
hind legs.”
“Pooh!” said Jan; “he
didn’t tell me that. I’m not afraid
of any mule alive. I guess if I can harness a
horse and drive home a load of grain from the field,
there isn’t much I can’t do with a mule!”
To prove his words he shouted “U-U”
at Netteke and slapped her flank with a long branch
of willow.
Now, Netteke was a proud mule and
she wasn’t used to being slapped. Father
De Smet knew her ways, and knew also that her steady,
even, slow pace was better in the long run than to
attempt to force a livelier gait, and Netteke was
well aware of what was expected of her. She resented
being interfered with. Instead of going forward
at greater speed, she put her four feet together,
laid back her ears, gave a loud “hee-haw!”
and stopped stock-still.
“U-U!” shouted
Jan. In vain! Netteke would not move.
Marie held a handful of fresh grass just out of reach
of her mouth. But Netteke was really offended.
She made no effort to get it. She simply stayed
where she was. Father De Smet stuck his head
over the side of the boat.
“What is the matter?” he shouted.
“Oh, dear!” said Jan to
Marie. “I hoped he wouldn’t notice
that the boat wasn’t moving.”
“Netteke has stopped. She
won’t go at all. I think she’s run
down!” Marie called back.
“Try coaxing her,” cried
the skipper. “Give her something to eat.
Hold it in front of her nose.”
“I have,” answered Marie,
“but she won’t even look at it.”
“Then it’s no use,”
said Father De Smet mournfully. “She’s
balked and that is all there is to it. We’ll
just have to wait until she is ready to go again.
When she has made up her mind she is as difficult to
persuade as a setting hen.”
Mother De Smet’s head appeared
beside her husband’s over the boat-rail.
“Oh, dear!” said she;
“I hoped we should get to the other side of the
line before dark, but if Netteke’s set, she’s
set, and we must just make the best of it. It’s
lucky it’s dinner-time. We’ll eat,
and maybe by the time we are through she’ll
be willing to start.” Father De Smet tossed
a bucket on to the grass.
“Give her a good drink,”
he said, “and come aboard yourselves.”
Jan filled the bucket from the river
and set it down before Netteke, but she was in no
mood for blandishments. She kept her ears back
and would not touch the water.
“All right, then, Crosspatch,”
said Jan. Leaving the pail in front of her, he
went back to the boat. The gangplank was put out,
and he and Marie went on board. They found dinner
ready in the tiny cabin, and because it was so small
and stuffy, and there were too many of them, anyway,
to get into it comfortably, they each took a bowl of
soup as Mother De Smet handed it to them and sat down
on the deck in front of the cabin to eat it.
It was not until the middle of the afternoon that
Netteke forgot her injuries, consented to eat and drink,
and indicated her willingness to move on toward Antwerp.