Joseph and his father were both on
the tow-path when at last Netteke decided to move.
As she set her ears forward and took the first step,
Father De Smet heaved a sigh of relief.
“Now, why couldn’t you
have done that long ago, you addlepated old fool,”
he said mildly to Netteke. “You have made
no end of trouble for us, and gained nothing for yourself!
Now I am afraid we shan’t get beyond the German
lines before dark. We may even have to spend the
night in dangerous territory, and all because you’re
just as mulish as, as a mule,” he finished helplessly.
Joseph laughed. “Can’t
you think of anything mulisher than a mule?”
he said.
“There isn’t a thing,” answered
his father.
“Well,” answered Joseph,
“there are a whole lot of other things beside
balky mules in this world that I wish had never been
made. There are spiders, and rats, and Germans.
They are all pests. I don’t see why they
were ever born.”
Father De Smet became serious at once.
“Son,” he said sternly,
“don’t ever let me hear you say such a
thing again. There are spiders, and rats, and
balky mules, and Germans, and it doesn’t do
a bit of good to waste words fussing because they are
here. The thing to do is to deal with them!”
Father De Smet was so much in earnest
that he boomed these words out in quite a loud voice.
Joseph seized his hand.
“Hush!” he whispered.
Father De Smet looked up. There,
standing right in front of them in the tow-path, was
a German soldier!
“Halt!” shouted the soldier.
But Netteke was now just as much bent
upon going as she had been before upon standing still.
She paid no attention whatever to the command, but
walked stolidly along the tow-path directly toward
the soldier.
“Halt!” cried the soldier again.
But Netteke had had no military training,
and she simply kept on. In one more step she
would have come down upon the soldier’s toes,
if he had not moved aside just in time. He was
very angry.
“Why didn’t you stop your
miserable old mule when I told you to?” he said
to Father De Smet.
“It’s a balky mule,”
replied Father De Smet mildly, “and very obstinate.”
“Indeed!” sneered the
soldier; “then, I suppose you have named him
Albert after your pig-headed King!”
“No,” answered Father
De Smet, “I think too much of my King to name
my mule after him.”
“Oh, ho!” said the German;
“then perhaps you have named him for the Kaiser!”
Netteke had marched steadily along
during this conversation, and they were now past the
soldier.
“No,” Father De Smet called
back, “I didn’t name her after the Kaiser.
I think too much of my mule!”
The soldier shook his fist after them.
“I’ll make you pay well for your impudence!”
he shouted. “You and I will meet again!”
“Very likely,” muttered
Father De Smet under his breath. He was now more
than ever anxious to get beyond the German lines before
dark, but as the afternoon passed it became certain
that they would not be able to do it. The shadows
grew longer and longer as Netteke plodded slowly along,
and at last Mother De Smet called to her husband over
the boatside.
“I think we shall have to stop
soon and feed the mule or she will be too tired to
get us across the line at all. I believe we should
save time by stopping for supper. Besides, I
want to send over there,” she pointed to a farmhouse
not a great distance from the river, “and get
some milk and eggs.”
“Very well,” said her
husband; “we’ll stop under that bunch of
willows.”
The bunch of willows beside the river
which he pointed out proved to be a pleasant, sheltered
spot, with grassy banks sloping down to the water.
A turn in the river enabled them to draw the “Old
Woman” up into their shadows, and because the
trees were green and the boat was green, the reflections
in the water were also green, and for this reason the
boat seemed very well hidden from view.
“I don’t believe we shall
be noticed here,” said Father De Smet.
“It’s hot on the boat.
It would be nice to take the babies ashore while we
eat,” said Mother De Smet, running out the gangplank.
“I believe we’ll have supper on the grass.
You hurry along and get the milk and eggs, and I’ll
cook some onions while you are gone.”
Jan and Marie ran over the plank at
once, and Mother De Smet soon followed with the babies.
Then, while Marie watched them, she and Jan brought
out the onions and a pan, and soon the air was heavy
with the smell of frying onions. Joseph and Jan
slipped the bridle over Netteke’s collar and
allowed her to eat the rich green grass at the river’s
edge. When Father De Smet returned, supper was
nearly ready. He sniffed appreciatively as he
appeared under the trees.
“Smells good,” he said
as he held out the milk and eggs toward his wife.
“Sie haben recht!”
(You are right!), said a loud voice right behind him!
Father De Smet was so startled that
he dropped the eggs. He whirled about, and there
stood the German soldier who had told Netteke to halt.
With him were six other men.
“Ha! I told you we should
meet again!” shouted the soldier to Father De
Smet. “And it was certainly thoughtful of
you to provide for our entertainment. Comrades,
fall to!”
The onions were still cooking over
a little blaze of twigs aid dry leaves, but Mother
De Smet was no longer tending them. The instant
she heard the gruff voice she had dropped her spoon,
and, seizing a baby under each arm, had fled up the
gangplank on to the boat. Marie followed at top
speed. Father De Smet faced the intruders.
“What do you want here?” he said.
“Some supper first,” said
the soldier gayly, helping himself to some onions
and passing the pan to his friends. “Then,
perhaps, a few supplies for our brave army. There
is no hurry. After supper will do; but first
we’ll drink a health to the Kaiser, and since
you are host here, you shall propose it!”
He pointed to the pail of milk which
Father De Smet still held.
“Now,” he shouted, “lift
your stein and say, ‘Hoch der Kaiser.’”
Father De Smet looked them in the
face and said not a word. Meanwhile Jan and Joseph,
to Mother De Smet’s great alarm, had not followed
her, on to the boat. Instead they had flown to
Netteke, who was partly hidden from the group by a
bunch of young willows near the water’s edge,
and with great speed and presence of mind had slipped
her bridle over her head and gently started her up
the tow-path.
“Oh,” murmured Joseph,
“suppose she should balk!” But Netteke
had done her balking for the day, and, having been
refreshed by her luncheon of green grass, she was
ready to move on. The river had now quite a current,
which helped them, and while the soldiers were still
having their joke with Father De Smet the boat moved
quietly out of sight. As she felt it move, Mother
De Smet lifted her head over the boat’s rail
behind which she and the children were hiding, and
raised the end of the gangplank so that it would make
no noise by scraping along the ground. She was
beside herself with anxiety. If she screamed or
said anything to the boys, the attention of the soldiers
would immediately be directed toward them. Yet
if they should by any miracle succeed in getting away,
there was her husband left alone to face seven enemies.
She wrung her hands.
“Maybe they will stop to eat
the onions,” she groaned to herself. She
held to the gangplank and murmured prayers to all the
saints she knew, while Jan and Joseph trotted briskly
along the tow-path, and Netteke, assisted by the current,
made better speed than she had at any time during
the day.
Meanwhile his captors were busy with
Father De Smet. “Come! Drink to the
Kaiser!” shouted the first soldier, “or
we’ll feed you to the fishes! We want our
supper, and you delay us.” Still Father
De Smet said nothing. “We’ll give
you just until I count ten,” said the soldier,
pointing his gun at him, “and if by that time
you have not found your tongue-”
But he did not finish the sentence.
From an unexpected quarter a shot rang out. It
struck the pail of milk and dashed it over the German
and over Father De Smet too. Another shot followed,
and the right arm of the soldier fell helpless to
his side. One of his companions gave a howl and
fell to the ground. Still no one appeared at whom
the Germans could direct their fire. “Snipers!”
shouted the soldiers, instantly lowering their guns,
but before they could even fire in the direction of
the unseen enemy, there was such a patter of bullets
about them that they turned and fled.
Father De Smet fled, too. He
leaped over the frying-pan and tore down the river-bank
after the boat. As he overtook it, Mother De Smet
ran out the gang plank. “Boys!” shouted
Father De Smet. “Get aboard! Get aboard!”
Joseph and Jan instantly stopped the mule and, dropping
the reins, raced up the gangplank, almost before the
end of it rested safely on the ground. Father
De Smet snatched up the reins. On went the boat
at Netteke’s best speed, which seemed no better
than a snail’s pace to the fleeing family.
Sounds of the skirmish continued to reach their ears,
even when they had gone some distance down the river,
and it was not until twilight had deepened into dusk,
and they were hidden in its shadows, that they dared
hope the danger was passed. It was after ten
o’clock at night when the “Old Woman”
at last approached the twinkling lights of Antwerp,
and they knew that, for the time being at least, they
were safe.
They wore now beyond the German lines
in country still held by the Belgians. Here,
in a suburb of the city, Father De Smet decided to
dock for the night. A distant clock struck eleven
as the hungry but thankful family gathered upon the
deck of the “Old Woman” to eat a meager
supper of bread and cheese with only the moon to light
their repast. Not until they had finished did
Father De Smet tell them all that had happened to
him during the few terrible moments when he was in
the hands of the enemy.
“They overreached themselves,”
he said. “They meant to amuse themselves
by prolonging my misery, and they lingered just a bit
too long.” He turned to Jan and Joseph.
“You were brave boys! If you had not started
the boat when you did, it is quite likely they might
have got me, after all, and the potatoes too.
I am proud of you.”
“But, Father,” cried Joseph,
“who could have fired those shots? We didn’t
see a soul.”
“Neither did I,” answered
his father; “and neither did the Germans for
that matter. There was no one in sight.”
“Oh,” cried Mother De
Smet, “it was as if the good God himself intervened
to save you!”
“As I figure it out,”
said Father De Smet, “we must have stopped very
near the trenches, and our own men must have seen the
Germans attack us. My German friend had evidently
been following us up, meaning to get everything we
had and me too. But the smell of the onions was
too much for him! If he hadn’t been greedy,
he might have carried out his plan, but he wanted
our potatoes and our supper too; and so he got neither!”
he chuckled. “And neither did the Kaiser
get a toast from me! Instead, he got a salute
from the Belgians.” He crossed himself reverently.
“Thank God for our soldiers,” he said,
and Mother De Smet, weeping softly, murmured a devout
“Amen.”
Little did Jan and Marie dream as
they listened, that this blessing rested upon their
own father, and that he had been one of the Belgian
soldiers, who, firing from the trenches, had delivered
them from the hands of their enemies. Their father,
hidden away, in the earth like a fox, as little dreamed
that he had helped to save his own children from a
terrible fate.