THE PUZZLING SIGNAL
When John awoke a bright sun was shining
in at the window, bringing with it the distant mutter
of cannon, a small fire was burning on the hearth
on the opposite side of the room, a man was bending
over the coals, and the pleasant odor of boiling coffee
came to his nostrils. He sat up in amazement
and looked at the man who, not turning around, went
on placidly with his work of preparing breakfast.
But he recognized the figure.
“Weber!” he exclaimed.
“None other!” said the
Alsatian, facing about, and showing a cheery countenance.
“I was in the boat just behind you when your
own was demolished by the shell. In all the spray
and foam and confusion I saw my chance, and dropping
overboard from ours I floated with the stream.
I had an idea that you might escape, and since you
must come down the river between the two armies I
also, for the same reasons, chose the same path.
I came upon this cottage several hours ago, picked
the fastenings of the door and to my astonishment
and delight found you, my friend, unharmed, but sound
asleep upon the bench there. I slept a while
in the corner, then I undertook to make breakfast with
provisions and utensils that I found in the forest.
Ah, it was easy enough last night to find almost anything
one wished. The fields and forest were full of
dead men.”
“I provided myself in the same
way, but I’m delighted to see you. I was
never before in my life so lonely. How chance
seems to throw us together so often!”
“And we’ve both profited
by it. The coffee is boiling now, Mr. Scott.
I’ve a good German coffee pot and two cups that
I took from the fallen. God rest their souls,
they’ll need them no more, while we do.”
“The battle goes on,”
said John, listening a moment at the window.
“Somewhere on the hundred mile
line it has continued without a break of an instant,
and it may go on this way for a week or a month.
Ah, it’s a fearful war, Mr. Scott, and we’ve
seen only the beginning! But drink the coffee
now, while it’s hot. And I’ve warmed
too, some of the cold food from the knapsacks.
German sausage is good at any time.”
“And just now it’s heavenly.
I’m glad we have such a plentiful supply of
sausage and bread, even if we did have to take it from
the dead. I want to tell you again how pleasant
it is to see you here.”
“I feel that way too. We’re
like comrades united. Now if we only had your
English friend Carstairs, your American friend Wharton,
and Lannes we’d be quite a family group.”
“I fancy that we’ll see
Lannes before we do Carstairs and Wharton.”
“I think so too. He’ll
certainly be hovering today somewhere over the ground
between the two armies—either to observe
the Germans or more likely to carry messages between
the French generals. I tell you, Mr. Scott, that
Philip Lannes is perhaps the most wonderful young man
in Europe. In addition to his extraordinary ability
in the air he has courage, coolness, perception and
quickness almost without equal. There’s
something Napoleonic about him.”
“You know he’s descended
from the family of the famous Marshal, Lannes, not
from Lannes himself, but from a close relative, and
the blood’s the same. They say that blood
will tell, and don’t you think that the spirit
of the great Lannes may have reappeared in Philip?”
“It’s altogether likely.”
“I’ve been thinking a
lot about Napoleon. There’s a wonderful
picture of him as a young republican general in a
room here. Perhaps it’s the conditions
around us, but at times I am sure the heroic days of
the First Republic have returned to France. The
spirit that animated Hoche and Marceau and Kleber
and Bonaparte, before he became spoiled, seems to
have descended upon the French. And there were
Murat, Lannes and Lefebvre, and Berthier and the others.
Think of that wonderful crowd of boys leading the
republican armies to victories over all the kings!
It seems to me the most marvelous thing in the history
of war, since the Greeks turned back the Persians.”
Weber refilled his coffee cup, drank
a portion of it, and said:
“I have thought of it, Mr. Scott,
I have thought of it more than once. It may be
that the Gallic fury has been aroused. It has
seemed so to me since the German armies were turned
back from Paris. The French have burned more
gunpowder than any other nation in Europe, and they’re
a fighting race. It would appear now that the
Terrible Year, 1870, was merely an aggregation of
mistakes, and did not represent either the wisdom
or natural genius of the nation.”
“That is, the French were then
far below normal, as we would say, but have now returned
to their best, and that the two Kaisers made the mistake
of thinking the French in their lowest form were the
French in their usual form?”
“It may be so,” said Weber,
thoughtfully. “Nations reckon their strength
in peace, but only war itself discloses the fact.
Evidently tremendous miscalculations have been made
by somebody.”
“By somebody? By whom?
That’s why I’m against the Kaisers and
all the secret business of the military monarchies.
War made over night by a dozen men! a third of the
world’s population plunged into battle! and
the rest drawn into the suffering some way or other!
I don’t like a lot of your European ways.”
Weber shook his head.
“We’ve inherited kings,” he said.
“But how did you find this place?”
“Accident. Stumbled on
it, and mighty grateful I was, too. It kept me
warm and dry after standing so long in the Marne I
thought I was bound to turn into a fish. Isolated
little place, but the Germans have been passing near.
Before sleeping last night, I went out scouting and
as I stood behind a hedge I saw a lot of them.
I recognized in a motor the Very High Born, his High
Mightiness, the owner of the earth, the Prince of
Auersperg.”
Weber took another drink of coffee.
“An able man and one of our
most bitter enemies,” he said. “A
foe of democracy everywhere. I think he was to
have been made governor of Paris, and then Paris would
have known that it had a governor. I’ve
seen him in Alsace, and I’ve heard a lot about
him.”
“But all that’s off now.
I fancy that the next governor of Paris, if it should
have a governor, will be a Frenchman. But the
day is advancing, Weber; what do you think we ought
to do?”
“I’ve been thinking of
your friend Lannes. I’ve an idea that he’ll
come for you, if he finds an interval in his duties.”
“But how could he possibly find
me? Why, it’s the old needle in the haystack
business.”
“He couldn’t unless we made some sort
of signal.”
“There’s no signal that I can make.”
“But there’s one that I can. Look,
Mr. Scott.”
He unbuttoned his long French coat,
and took from his breast a roll of red, white and
blue. He opened it and disclosed a French flag
about four feet long.
“If that were put in a conspicuous
place,” he said, “an aviator with glasses
could see it a long way, and he would come to find
out what it meant.”
“The top of a tree is the place
for it!” exclaimed John. “Now if you
only had around here a real tree, or two, in place
of what we call saplings in my country, we might do
some fine signaling with the flag.”
“We’ll try it, but I think
we should go a considerable distance from the cottage.
If Germans instead of French should come then we’d
have a better chance of escaping among the hedges
and vineyards.”
John agreed with him and they quickly
made ready, each taking his automatic and knapsack,
and leaving the fire to die of itself on the hearth.
“I’m telling that cottage
good-bye with regret,” said John, as they walked
away. “I spent some normal and peaceful
hours there last night and it’s a neat little
place. I hope its owners will be able to come
back to it. As soon as I open the stable door,
in order that the horse may go where he will, I’ll
be ready.”
He gave the big animal a friendly
pat as he left and Marne gazed after him with envious
sorrowful eyes.
They walked a full mile, keeping close
to the Marne, where the trees and bushes were thickest,
and listened meanwhile to the fourth day’s swelling
roar of the battle. Its long continuance had made
it even more depressing and terrifying than in its
earlier stages. To John’s mind, at least,
it took on the form of a cataclysm, of some huge paroxysm
of the earth. He ate to it, he slept to it, he
woke to it, and now he was walking to it. The
illusion was deepened by the fact that no human being
save Weber was visible to him. The country between
the two monstrous battle lines was silent and deserted.
“Apparently,” said Weber,
“we’re in no danger of human interference
as we walk here.”
“Not unless a shell coming from
a point fifteen miles or so beyond the hills should
drop on us, or we should be pierced by an arrow from
one of our Frenchmen in the clouds. But so far
as I can see there’s nothing above us, although
I can make out one or two aeroplanes far toward the
east.”
“The air is heavy and cloudy
and that’s against them, but they’ll be
out before long. You’ll see. I think,
Mr. Scott, that we’ll find a good tree in that
little grove of beeches there.”
“The tall one in the center. Yes, that’ll
suit us.”
They inspected the tree and then made
a long circuit about it, finding nobody near.
John, full of zeal and enthusiasm, volunteered to climb
the tree and fasten the flag to its topmost stem,
and Weber, after some claims on his own behalf, agreed.
John was a good climber, alert, agile and full of
strength, and he went up the trunk like an expert.
It was an uncommonly tall tree for France, much more
than a sapling, and when he reached the last bough
that would support him he found that he could see
over all the other trees and some of the low hills.
At a little distance ran the Marne, a silver sheet,
and he thought he could discern faint puffs of smoke
on the hills beyond. No human being was in sight,
but although high in the tree he could still feel
the vibrations of the air beneath the throb of so
many great guns. Several aeroplanes hovered at
points far distant, and he knew that others would be
on the long battle line.
Reaching as high as he could he tied
the flag with a piece of twine that Weber had given
him—the Alsation seemed to have provided
for everything—and then watched it as it
unfolded and fluttered in the light breeze. He
felt a certain pride, as he had done his part of the
task well. The flag waved above the green leaves
and any watcher of the skies could see it.
“How does it show?” he called to Weber.
“Well, indeed. You’d
better climb down now. If the Germans come from
the air they’ll get you there, and if they come
on land they’ll have you in the tree. You’ll
be caught between air and earth.”
“That being the case I’ll
come down at once,” said John, and he descended
the tree rapidly. At Weber’s advice they
withdrew to a cluster of vines growing near, where
they would be well hidden, since their signal was
as likely to draw enemies as friends.
“I think Lannes will surely see that flag,”
said Weber.
“Why do you have such great confidence in his
coming?” asked John.
“He inspires confidence, when
you see him, and there’s his reputation.
I’ve an idea that he’ll be carrying dispatches
between the two wings of the French army, dispatches
of vast importance, since the different French forces
have to cooperate now along a line of four or five
score miles. Of course the telephone and the
telegraph are at work, too, but the value of the aeroplane
as a scout and dispatch bearer cannot be over estimated.”
“One is coming now,” said
John, “and I think it has been attracted by
our flag. I take it to be German.”
“Then we’d better keep
very close. Still, there’s little chance
of our being seen here, and the aviators, even if
they suspect a presence, can’t afford to descend,
leave their planes and search for anybody.”
“I agree with you there.
One can remain here in comparative safety and watch
the results of our signal. That machine is coming
fast and I’m quite sure it’s German.”
“An armored machine with two
men and a light rapid fire gun in it. Beyond
a doubt it will circle about our tree.”
The plane was very near now, and assuredly
it was German. John could discern the Teutonic
cast of their countenances, as the two men in it leaned
over and looked at the flag. They dropped lower
and lower and then flew in circles about the tree.
John, despite his anxiety and suspense, could not
fail to notice the humorous phase of it. The plane
certainly could not effect a landing in the boughs,
and if it descended to the ground in order that one
of their number might get out, climb the tree and
capture the flag, they would incur the danger of a
sudden swoop from French machines. Besides, the
flag would be of no value to them, unless they knew
who put it there and why.
“The Germans, of course, see
that it’s a French flag,” he said to Weber.
“I wonder what they’re going to do.”
“I think they’ll have
to leave it,” said Weber, “because I can
now see other aeroplanes to the west, aeroplanes which
may be French, and they dare not linger too long.”
“And our little flag may make
a big disturbance in the heavens.”
“So it seems.”
The German plane made circle after
circle around the tree, finally drew off to some distance,
and then, as it wavered back and forth, its machine
gun began to spit fire. Little boughs and leaves
cut from the tree fell to the ground, but the flag,
untouched, fluttered defiantly in the light breeze.
“They’re trying to shoot
it down,” said John, “and with such an
unsteady gun platform they’ve missed every time.”
“I doubt whether they’ll
continue firing,” said Weber. “An
aeroplane doesn’t carry any great amount of
ammunition and they can’t afford to waste much.”
“They’re through now,”
said John. “See, they’re flying away
toward the east, and unless my imagination deceives
me, their machine actually looks crestfallen, while
our flag is snapping away in the wind, haughty and
defiant.”
“A vivid fancy yours, Mr. Scott,
but it’s easy to imagine that German machine
looking cheap, because that’s just the way the
men on board it must feel. Suppose we sit down
here and take our ease. No flying man can see
through those vines over our heads, and we can watch
in safety. We’re sure to draw other scouts
of the air, while for us it’s an interesting
and comparatively safe experience.”
“Our flag is certainly an attraction,”
said John, making himself comfortable on the ground.
“There’s a bird of passage now, coming
down from the north as swift as a swallow.”
“It’s a little monoplane,”
said Weber, “and it certainly resembles a swallow,
as it comes like a flash toward this tree. I thought
at first it might be Lannes in the Arrow, but
the plane is too small, and it’s of German make.”
“I fancy it won’t linger
long. This is not a healthy bit of space for
lone fellows in monoplanes.”
The little plane slackened its speed,
as it approached the tree, and then sailed by it at
a moderate rate. When it was opposite the flag
a spurt of flame came from the pistol of the man in
it, and John actually laughed.
“That was sheer spite,”
he said. “Did he think he could shoot our
flag away with a single bullet from a pistol when
a machine gun has just failed? That’s right,
turn about and make off as fast as you can, you poor
little mono!”
The monoplane also curved around the
tree, but did not make a series of circles. Instead,
when its prow was turned northward it darted off again
in that direction, going even more swiftly than it
had come, as if the aviator were ashamed of himself
and wished to get away as soon as possible from the
scene of his disgrace. Away and away it flew,
dwindling to a black speck and then to nothing.
John’s shoulders shook, and
Weber, looking at him, was forced to smile too.
“Well, it was funny,”
he said. “Our flag is certainly making a
stir in the heavens.”
“I wonder what will come next,”
said John. “It’s like bait drawing
birds of prey.”
The heavens were now beautifully clear,
a vault of blue velvet, against which anything would
show. Far away the cannon groaned and thundered,
and the waves of air pulsed heavily, but John noticed
neither now. His whole attention was centered
upon the flag, and what it might call from the air.
“In such a brilliant atmosphere
we can certainly see our visitors from afar,”
he said.
“So we can,” said Weber,
“and lo! another appears out of the east!”
The dark speck showed on the horizon
and grew fast, coming apparently straight in their
direction. John did not believe it had seen their
flag at first, owing to the great distance, but was
either a messenger or a scout. As it soon began
to descend from its great height in the air, although
still preserving a straight course for the tree, he
felt sure that the flag had now come into its view.
It grew very fast in size and was outlined with startling
clearness against the burning blue of the sky.
The approaching machine consisted
of two planes alike in shape and size, superimposed
and about six feet apart, the whole with a stabilizing
tail about ten feet long and six feet broad.
John saw as it approached that the aviator sat before
the motor and screw, but that the elevating and steering
rudders were placed in front of him. There were
three men besides the aviator in the machine.
“A biplane,” said John.
“Yes,” said Weber, “I
recognize the type of the machine. It’s
originally a French model.”
“But in this case, undoubtedly
a German imitation. They’ve seen our flag,
because I can make out one of the men with glasses
to his eyes. They hover about as if in uncertainty.
No wonder they can’t make up their minds, because
there’s the tricolor floating from the top of
that tall tree, and not a thing in the world to explain
why it’s in such a place. A man with a
rifle is about to take a shot at it. Bang!
There it goes! But I can’t see that the
bullet has damaged our flag. Look, how it whips
about and snaps defiance! Now, all the men except
the aviator himself have out glasses and are studying
the phenomenon of our signal. They come above
the tree, and I think they’re going to make a
swoop around the grove near the ground. Lie close,
Weber! As I found out once before, a thick forest
is the best defense against aeroplanes. They
can’t get through the screen of boughs.”
They heard a whirring and drumming,
and the biplane not more than fifty feet above the
earth made several circles about the little wood.
John saw the men in it very clearly. He could
even discern the German cast of countenance where
all except the one at the wheel that controlled the
two rudders had thrown back their hoods and taken off
their glasses. The three carried rifles which
they held ready for use, in case they detected an
enemy.
Whirling around like a vast primeval
bird of prey the biplane began to rise, as if disappointed
of a victim, and winding upward was soon above the
trees. Then John heard the rapid crackle of rifles.
“Shooting at our flag again!” he exclaimed.
But the whizz of a bullet that buried
itself in the earth near him told him better.
“It isn’t possible that they’ve
seen us!” he exclaimed.
“No,” said Weber, “they’re
merely peppering the woods and vines in the hope that
they’ll hit a concealed enemy, if such there
should be.”
“That being the case,”
said John, “I’m going to make my body as
small as possible, and push myself into the ground
if I can.”
He lay very close, but the rifle fire
quickly passed to other portions of the wood, and
then died away entirely. John straightened himself
out and saw the biplane becoming smaller, as it flew
off in the direction whence it had come.
“I hope you’ll come to
no good,” he said, shaking his fist at the disappearing
plane. “You’ve scared me half to death
with your shots, and I hope that both your rudders
will get out of gear and stay out of gear! I
hope that the wheel controlling them will be smashed
up! I hope that the top plane will crash into
the bottom one! I hope that a French shell will
shoot your tail off! And I hope that you’ll
tumble to the earth and lie there, nothing but a heap
of rotting wood and rusty old metal!”
“Well done, Mr. Scott!”
said Weber. “That was quite a curse, but
I think it will take something more solid to disable
the biplane.”
“I think so too, but I’ve
relieved my feelings, and after a man has done so
he can work a lot better. What are we to look
for now, Weber? We don’t seem to have success
in attracting anything but Germans. If Lannes
is coming at all, as you think he will, he’ll
get a pretty late ticket of admission to our reserved
section of the air.”
“You must remember that the
sky above us is a pretty large place, and at any rate
we’re a drawing power. We’re always
pulling something out of the ether.”
“And our biggest catch is coming
now! Look, Weber, look I If that isn’t
one of Herr Zeppelin’s railroad trains of the
air then I’ll eat it when it gets here!”
“You’re right, Mr. Scott.
There the monster comes. It can’t be anything
but a Zeppelin! They must have one of their big
sheds not far east of us.”
“We’ll hear its rattling
soon. Like the others it will surely see our
flag and make for it. But if they take a notion
to shoot up the wood, as the men on that biplane did,
we’d better hunt holes. A Zeppelin can
carry a lot of soldiers.”
The Zeppelin was not moving fast.
It had none of the quick graceful movements of the
aeroplanes, but came on slowly like some huge monster
of the air, looking about for prey. It turned
southeast for a moment or two, then some one on board
saw the flag and coming back it lumbered toward the
tree.
“Ugly things,” said John.
“Lannes and I blew up one once, and I wish I
had the same chance against that fellow up there.
But they’re in the same puzzled state that the
other fellows were. Men on both platforms are
examining the flag through glasses, and the flag doesn’t
give a rap for them. It’s standing out
in the wind, now, straight and stiff. It seems
to know that old Noah’s ark can’t make
it out.”
The huge Zeppelin drew its length
along the grove, coming as close to the trees as it
dared, then passed above, and after some circling
lumbered away to the south.
“Good-bye, old Mr. Curiosity,”
exclaimed John. “You weren’t invited
here, and I don’t care whether you ever come
again. Besides, you’re nothing but a big
bluff, anyway. There’s our flag, still standing
straight out in the wind, so you can see every stripe
on it, and yet you haven’t, despite your visit,
the remotest idea why it was put there!”
Weber smiled.
“They’ve all gone away
as ignorant as they were when they came,” he
said, “but we must be due for a French visitor
or two. After so long a run of Germans we should
have Frenchmen soon.”
“I begin to believe with you
that Lannes will arrive some time or other. He
flies fast and far and in time he must see our signal.”
“I’ve never doubted it.
Meanwhile I think I’ll take a little luncheon,
and I’d advise you to do the same. We haven’t
had such a bad time here, saving those random rifle
shots from the biplane.”
“Not at all. It’s
like watching a play, and you certainly have a clear
field for observation, when you look up at the heavens.
The stage is always in full view.”
John was feeling uncommonly good.
Their concealment while they watched the scouts and
messengers from the skies coming to see the meaning
of the flag had been easy and restful. Much of
his long and painful tension had relaxed. The
hum of distant artillery was in his ears as ever, like
a moaning of the wind, but he was growing so used to
it that he would now have noticed its absence rather
than its presence. So he ate his share of bread
and sausage with a good appetite, meanwhile keeping
a watchful eye upon the heavens which burned in the
same brilliant blue.
It was now about noon. The rain
the night before had given fresh tints to the green
of grass and foliage. The whole earth, indifferent
to the puny millions that struggled on its vast bosom,
seemed refreshed and revitalized. A modest little
bird in brown plumage perched on a bough near them,
and, indifferent too, to war, poured forth a brilliant
volume of song.
“Happy little fellow,”
John said. “Nothing to do but eat and sleep
and sing.”
“Unless he’s snapped up
by some bigger bird,” said Weber, “but
having been an hour without callers we’re now
about to have a new one. And as this comes from
the west it’s likely to be French.”
John felt excitement, and stood up.
Yes, there was the machine coming out of the blue
haze in the west, soaring beautifully and fast.
It was very high, but his eye, trained now, saw that
it was descending gradually. He felt an intense
hope that it was Lannes, but he soon knew that it
was not lie. The approaching machine could not
possibly be the Arrow.
“It’s a Bleriot monoplane,”
said Weber. “I can tell the type almost
as far as I can see it. It’s much like
a gigantic bird, with powerful parchment wings mounted
upon a strong body. The wings as you see now
present a concave surface to the earth. They always
do that. The flyer sits between the two wings
and has in front of him the lever with which he controls
the whole affair.”
“You seem to know a good deal
about flying machines, Weber.”
“Oh, yes, I’ve observed
them a lot. I’ve always been curious about
them and I’ve attended the great flying meets
at Rheims, but personally I’m a coward about
heights. I study the types of these wonderful
machines, but I don’t go up in ’em.
That’s a little fellow coming now and he’s
seen the flag.”
“There’s only one man
in the plane, but as he’s undoubtedly French
what do you think we ought to do? He can’t
carry us away with him in the machine, it’s
too small. Do you think we should signal him to
come to the ground and have a talk?”
“Perhaps we’d better let
him pass, Mr. Scott. We have no real information
to give. He might suspect that we are Germans
and a lot of time would be lost maneuvering.
Suppose we remain in hiding, and say nothing until
Lannes himself appears.”
“You still feel sure that he will come?”
“It’s a conviction.”
“Same way with me, and I agree
with you that we’d better let our friend in
the Bleriot go by. He’s descending fast
now. The plane certainly does look like a bird.
Reminds me somewhat of a German Taube, though this
machine is much smaller.”
“The pilot will take only a
look or two at the flag. Then, if we don’t
hail him, he’ll sail swiftly back to the west.”
“For good reasons too.
The air here is chiefly in the German sphere of influence,
and if I were in his place I’d take to my heels
too at a single glance.”
“That’s what he’s
doing now. He’s flying past the flag just
as one of the Germans did. He leans over to take
a look at it, can’t make out what it means,
glances back apprehensively toward the German quarter
of the heavens, and now he’s sliding like a
streak through the blue for French air.”
“So near and yet so far!
A friend in the air just over our heads, and we had
to let him go. Well, he couldn’t have done
us any good.”
“No, he couldn’t, and
he’s gone back so fast that he’s out of
sight already, but another and different inhabitant
of the air is coming out of the south. See, the
shape off there, Mr. Scott. Wait until it comes
nearer, and I think I can tell you what it is.
Now it’s made out the flag and is steering for
it.”
“What class of plane is it,
Weber? Can you tell that yet?”
“Yes. It’s an Esnault-Pelterie,
an invention of a young Frenchman. It’s
a monoplane with flexible, warped wings. It’s
made of steel tubes, welded together, and it has two
wheels, one behind the other for contact with the
ground.”
“I noticed something queer in
its appearance. It’s the wheels. I
don’t call this machine any great beauty, but
it seems to cut the air well. I suppose we’d
better treat it as we did the Bleriot—let
it go as it came, none the worse and none the wiser?”
“I think so. But we have
no other choice! That flyer is a suspicious fellow
and he isn’t taking any chances. He’s
come fairly close to the flag, and now he’s
sheering off at an angle.”
“I don’t blame him.
He probably has something more important to do than
to unravel the meaning of a flag in a tree top.”
“Nor I either. But whatever
comes we’ll wait for Lannes, always for Lannes.
The heavens here, Mr. Scott, are peopled with strange
birds, but of all the lot there is one particular
bird for which we are looking.”
“Right again. My eyes have
grown a little weary of watching the skies. For
a long stare, blue isn’t as soft and easy a sight
as green, and I think I’ll look at the grass
and leaves for a little while.”
“Then while you rest I’ll
keep an outlook and when I’m tired you can relieve
me.”
“Good enough.”
John lay down in the grass and rested
his body while he eased his worn eyes. Weber
commented now and then on the new birds in the heavens,
aeroplanes of all kinds, but they kept their distance.
“The air over us is not held
now by either French or Germans,” said Weber,
“and I imagine that only the more daring make
incursions into it. Perhaps, too, they are kept
busy elsewhere, because, as my ears distinctly tell
me, the battle is increasing in volume.”
“I noticed the swelling fire
when I lay down here,” said John. “It
seems a strange thing, but for a while I had forgotten
all about the battle.”
Presently Weber took his eyes from
the heavens, moved about and looked uneasy.
“If I’m not mistaken,”
he said, “I caught a glimpse of steel down the
river. I think it was a lance head glittering
in the sun, and Uhlans may be near.”
“How far away do you think it was.”
“A half-mile or more. I
must take a look in that direction. I’m
a good scout, Mr. Scott, and I’ll see what’s
up. Watch here will you, until I come back?
It may be some time.”
“All right, but don’t
get yourself captured, Weber. I’d be mighty
lonesome without you.”
“Don’t fear for me.
Of course, as I told you, I’ll be gone for some
time, and if I may suggest, Mr. Scott, I wouldn’t
move from among the vines.”
“Catch me doing it! I’ll
say here in my green bower and as my eyes are back
in form I’ll watch the heavens.”
“Good-bye, then, for a while.”
Weber slipped away. His tread
was so light that he vanished, as if he had melted
into air.
“That man would certainly have
made a good scout in our old Indian days,” thought
John, and with the thought came the conviction that
Weber was too clever to let himself be caught.
Then he turned his attention back to the heavens.
They were now well on into the afternoon,
and the sun was at the zenith. A haze of gold
shimmered against the vast blue vault. A wind
perfumed with grass and green leaves, brought also
the ceaseless roar of the guns, and now and then the
bitter taste of burned gunpowder. The faint trembling
of the earth, or rather of the air just above it, went
on, and John, turning about in his little bower, surveyed
the heavens from all quarters.
He saw shapes, faint, dark and floating
on every horizon, but none of them came near until
a full half-hour had elapsed. Then one shot out
of the west, sailed toward the northeast, but curving
suddenly, came back in the direction of the tree.
As the shape grew larger and more defined John’s
heart began to throb. He had seen many aeroplanes
that day, and most of them had been swift and graceful,
but none was as swift and graceful as the one that
was now coming.
It was a machine, beautiful in shape,
and as lithe and fast as the darting swallow.
There could be none other like it in the heavens, and
his heart throbbed harder. Intuition, perhaps,
was back of knowledge and he never for a moment doubted
that it was he for whom they had looked so long.
The aeroplane seemed fairly to shoot
out of space. First its outlines became visible,
and then the man at the rudder. He came straight
toward the tree, dropped low and circled about it,
while John rushed from the vines and cried as loud
as he could:
“Lannes! Lannes, it’s
me! John Scott! I’ve been waiting for
you!”
The Arrow dropped further,
barely touched the earth, and Lannes, leaning over,
shouted to John in tones, tense and sharp with command:
“Give the plane a shove with
all your might, and jump in. For God’s sake
don’t linger, man! Jump!”
The impulse communicated by Lannes
was so powerful that before he knew what he was doing
John pushed the Arrow violently and sprang into
the extra seat, just as it was leaving the earth.
Lannes gave the rudder a strong twist
and the aeroplane shot up like a mounting bird.
John got back his breath and presence of mind.
“Wait, Philip! Wait!”
he cried. “We’re leaving behind our
friend Weber! He’s down there, somewhere
by the river!”
Lannes made no reply. The Arrow
continued its rise, sharp and swift, and John heard
a crackling sound below. Little missiles, steel
and deadly, shot by them. One passed so close
to his face that his breath went again. When
he recovered it once more the Arrow, its inmates,
unharmed, was far above the range of rifles, flying
in a circle.
“Look down, John,” said Lannes.