9
Victory! She was here, a slave
to these black conquerors. Once more I started
toward her, but better judgment held me back—I
could do nothing to help her other than by stealth.
Could I even accomplish aught by this means?
I did not know. It seemed beyond the pale of
possibility, and yet I should try.
“And you will not bend the knee
to me?” continued Menelek, after she had spoken.
Victory shook her head in a most decided negation.
“You shall be my first choice,
then,” said the emperor. “I like
your spirit, for the breaking of it will add to my
pleasure in you, and never fear but that it shall be
broken— this very night. Take her
to my apartments,” and he motioned to an officer
at his side
I was surprised to see Victory follow
the man off in apparent quiet submission. I
tried to follow, that I might be near her against
some opportunity to speak with her or assist in her
escape. But, after I had followed them from
the throne room, through several other apartments,
and down a long corridor, I found my further progress
barred by a soldier who stood guard before a doorway
through which the officer conducted Victory.
Almost immediately the officer reappeared
and started back in the direction of the throne room.
I had been hiding in a doorway after the guard had
turned me back, having taken refuge there while his
back was turned, and, as the officer approached me,
I withdrew into the room beyond, which was in darkness.
There I remained for a long time, watching the sentry
before the door of the room in which Victory was a
prisoner, and awaiting some favorable circumstance
which would give me entry to her.
I have not attempted to fully describe
my sensations at the moment I recognized Victory,
because, I can assure you, they were entirely indescribable.
I should never have imagined that the sight of any
human being could affect me as had this unexpected
discovery of Victory in the same room in which I was,
while I had thought of her for weeks either as dead,
or at best hundreds of miles to the west, and as irretrievably
lost to me as though she were, in truth, dead.
I was filled with a strange, mad impulse
to be near her. It was not enough merely to
assist her, or protect her—I desired to
touch her—to take her in my arms.
I was astounded at myself. Another thing puzzled
me—it was my incomprehensible feeling of
elation since I had again seen her. With a fate
worse than death staring her in the face, and with
the knowledge that I should probably die defending
her within the hour, I was still happier than I had
been for weeks—and all because I had seen
again for a few brief minutes the figure of a little
heathen maiden. I couldn’t account for
it, and it angered me; I had never before felt any
such sensations in the presence of a woman, and I had
made love to some very beautiful ones in my time.
It seemed ages that I stood in the
shadow of that doorway, in the ill-lit corridor of
the palace of Menelek XIV. A sickly gas jet
cast a sad pallor upon the black face of the sentry.
The fellow seemed rooted to the spot. Evidently
he would never leave, or turn his back again.
I had been in hiding but a short time
when I heard the sound of distant cannon. The
truce had ended, and the battle had been resumed.
Very shortly thereafter the earth shook to the explosion
of a shell within the city, and from time to time
thereafter other shells burst at no great distance
from the palace. The yellow men were bombarding
New Gondar again.
Presently officers and slaves commenced
to traverse the corridor on matters pertaining to
their duties, and then came the emperor, scowling
and wrathful. He was followed by a few personal
attendants, whom he dismissed at the doorway to his
apartments—the same doorway through which
Victory had been taken. I chafed to follow him,
but the corridor was filled with people. At
last they betook themselves to their own apartments,
which lay upon either side of the corridor.
An officer and a slave entered the
very room in which I hid, forcing me to flatten myself
to one side in the darkness until they had passed.
Then the slave made a light, and I knew that I must
find another hiding place.
Stepping boldly into the corridor,
I saw that it was now empty save for the single sentry
before the emperor’s door. He glanced up
as I emerged from the room, the occupants of which
had not seen me. I walked straight toward the
soldier, my mind made up in an instant. I tried
to simulate an expression of cringing servility, and
I must have succeeded, for I entirely threw the man
off his guard, so that he permitted me to approach
within reach of his rifle before stopping me.
Then it was too late—for him.
Without a word or a warning, I snatched
the piece from his grasp, and, at the same time struck
him a terrific blow between the eyes with my clenched
fist. He staggered back in surprise, too dumbfounded
even to cry out, and then I clubbed his rifle and
felled him with a single mighty blow.
A moment later, I had burst into the
room beyond. It was empty!
I gazed about, mad with disappointment.
Two doors opened from this to other rooms.
I ran to the nearer and listened. Yes, voices
were coming from beyond and one was a woman’s,
level and cold and filled with scorn. There was
no terror in it. It was Victory’s.
I turned the knob and pushed the door
inward just in time to see Menelek seize the girl
and drag her toward the far end of the apartment.
At the same instant there was a deafening roar just
outside the palace—a shell had struck much
nearer than any of its predecessors. The noise
of it drowned my rapid rush across the room.
But in her struggles, Victory turned
Menelek about so that he saw me. She was striking
him in the face with her clenched fist, and now he
was choking her.
At sight of me, he gave voice to a
roar of anger.
“What means this, slave?”
he cried. “Out of here! Out of here!
Quick, before I kill you!”
But for answer I rushed upon him,
striking him with the butt of the rifle. He
staggered back, dropping Victory to the floor, and
then he cried aloud for the guard, and came at me.
Again and again I struck him; but his thick skull
might have been armor plate, for all the damage I
did it.
He tried to close with me, seizing
the rifle, but I was stronger than he, and, wrenching
the weapon from his grasp, tossed it aside and made
for his throat with my bare hands. I had not
dared fire the weapon for fear that its report would
bring the larger guard stationed at the farther end
of the corridor.
We struggled about the room, striking
one another, knocking over furniture, and rolling
upon the floor. Menelek was a powerful man,
and he was fighting for his life. Continually
he kept calling for the guard, until I succeeded in
getting a grip upon his throat; but it was too late.
His cries had been heard, and suddenly the door burst
open, and a score of armed guardsmen rushed into the
apartment.
Victory seized the rifle from the
floor and leaped between me and them. I had
the black emperor upon his back, and both my hands
were at his throat, choking the life from him.
The rest happened in the fraction
of a second. There was a rending crash above
us, then a deafening explosion within the chamber.
Smoke and powder fumes filled the room. Half
stunned, I rose from the lifeless body of my antagonist
just in time to see Victory stagger to her feet and
turn toward me. Slowly the smoke cleared to
reveal the shattered remnants of the guard.
A shell had fallen through the palace roof and exploded
just in the rear of the detachment of guardsmen who
were coming to the rescue of their emperor. Why
neither Victory nor I were struck is a miracle.
The room was a wreck. A great, jagged hole
was torn in the ceiling, and the wall toward the corridor
had been blown entirely out.
As I rose, Victory had risen, too,
and started toward me. But when she saw that
I was uninjured she stopped, and stood there in the
center of the demolished apartment looking at me.
Her expression was inscrutable—I could
not guess whether she was glad to see me, or not.
“Victory!” I cried.
“Thank God that you are safe!” And I
approached her, a greater gladness in my heart than
I had felt since the moment that I knew the Coldwater
must be swept beyond thirty.
There was no answering gladness in
her eyes. Instead, she stamped her little foot
in anger.
“Why did it have to be you who
saved me!” she exclaimed. “I hate
you!”
“Hate me?” I asked.
“Why should you hate me, Victory? I do
not hate you. I—I—”
What was I about to say? I was very close to
her as a great light broke over me. Why had I
never realized it before? The truth accounted
for a great many hitherto inexplicable moods that
had claimed me from time to time since first I had
seen Victory.
“Why should I hate you?”
she repeated. “Because Snider told me—he
told me that you had promised me to him, but he did
not get me. I killed him, as I should like to
kill you!”
“Snider lied!” I cried.
And then I seized her and held her in my arms, and
made her listen to me, though she struggled and fought
like a young lioness. “I love you, Victory.
You must know that I love you—that I have
always loved you, and that I never could have made
so base a promise.”
She ceased her struggles, just a trifle,
but still tried to push me from her. “You
called me a barbarian!” she said.
Ah, so that was it! That still
rankled. I crushed her to me.
“You could not love a barbarian,”
she went on, but she had ceased to struggle.
“But I do love a barbarian,
Victory!” I cried, “the dearest barbarian
in the world.”
She raised her eyes to mine, and then
her smooth, brown arms encircled my neck and drew
my lips down to hers.
“I love you—I have
loved you always!” she said, and then she buried
her face upon my shoulder and sobbed. “I
have been so unhappy,” she said, “but
I could not die while I thought that you might live.”
As we stood there, momentarily forgetful
of all else than our new found happiness, the ferocity
of the bombardment increased until scarce thirty seconds
elapsed between the shells that rained about the palace.
To remain long would be to invite
certain death. We could not escape the way that
we had entered the apartment, for not only was the
corridor now choked with debris, but beyond the corridor
there were doubtless many members of the emperor’s
household who would stop us.
Upon the opposite side of the room
was another door, and toward this I led the way.
It opened into a third apartment with windows overlooking
an inner court. From one of these windows I
surveyed the courtyard. Apparently it was empty,
and the rooms upon the opposite side were unlighted.
Assisting Victory to the open, I followed,
and together we crossed the court, discovering upon
the opposite side a number of wide, wooden doors set
in the wall of the palace, with small windows between.
As we stood close behind one of the doors, listening,
a horse within neighed.
“The stables!” I whispered,
and, a moment later, had pushed back a door and entered.
From the city about us we could hear the din of great
commotion, and quite close the sounds of battle—the
crack of thousands of rifles, the yells of the soldiers,
the hoarse commands of officers, and the blare of
bugles.
The bombardment had ceased as suddenly
as it had commenced. I judged that the enemy
was storming the city, for the sounds we heard were
the sounds of hand-to-hand combat.
Within the stables I groped about
until I had found saddles and bridles for two horses.
But afterward, in the darkness, I could find but
a single mount. The doors of the opposite side,
leading to the street, were open, and we could see
great multitudes of men, women, and children fleeing
toward the west. Soldiers, afoot and mounted,
were joining the mad exodus. Now and then a
camel or an elephant would pass bearing some officer
or dignitary to safety. It was evident that
the city would fall at any moment—a fact
which was amply proclaimed by the terror-stricken
haste of the fear-mad mob.
Horse, camel, and elephant trod helpless
women and children beneath their feet. A common
soldier dragged a general from his mount, and, leaping
to the animal’s back, fled down the packed street
toward the west. A woman seized a gun and brained
a court dignitary, whose horse had trampled her child
to death. Shrieks, curses, commands, supplications
filled the air. It was a frightful scene—one
that will be burned upon my memory forever.
I had saddled and bridled the single
horse which had evidently been overlooked by the royal
household in its flight, and, standing a little back
in the shadow of the stable’s interior, Victory
and I watched the surging throng without.
To have entered it would have been
to have courted greater danger than we were already
in. We decided to wait until the stress of blacks
thinned, and for more than an hour we stood there
while the sounds of battle raged upon the eastern
side of the city and the population flew toward the
west. More and more numerous became the uniformed
soldiers among the fleeing throng, until, toward the
last, the street was packed with them. It was
no orderly retreat, but a rout, complete and terrible.
The fighting was steadily approaching
us now, until the crack of rifles sounded in the very
street upon which we were looking. And then
came a handful of brave men—a little rear
guard backing slowly toward the west, working their
smoking rifles in feverish haste as they fired volley
after volley at the foe we could not see.
But these were pressed back and back
until the first line of the enemy came opposite our
shelter. They were men of medium height, with
olive complexions and almond eyes. In them I
recognized the descendants of the ancient Chinese
race.
They were well uniformed and superbly
armed, and they fought bravely and under perfect discipline.
So rapt was I in the exciting events transpiring
in the street that I did not hear the approach of
a body of men from behind. It was a party of
the conquerors who had entered the palace and were
searching it.
They came upon us so unexpectedly
that we were prisoners before we realized what had
happened. That night we were held under a strong
guard just outside the eastern wall of the city, and
the next morning were started upon a long march toward
the east.
Our captors were not unkind to us,
and treated the women prisoners with respect.
We marched for many days—so many that
I lost count of them—and at last we came
to another city—a Chinese city this time—which
stands upon the site of ancient Moscow.
It is only a small frontier city,
but it is well built and well kept. Here a large
military force is maintained, and here also, is a
terminus of the railroad that crosses modern China
to the Pacific.
There was every evidence of a high
civilization in all that we saw within the city, which,
in connection with the humane treatment that had been
accorded all prisoners upon the long and tiresome
march, encouraged me to hope that I might appeal to
some high officer here for the treatment which my
rank and birth merited.
We could converse with our captors
only through the medium of interpreters who spoke
both Chinese and Abyssinian. But there were
many of these, and shortly after we reached the city
I persuaded one of them to carry a verbal message to
the officer who had commanded the troops during the
return from New Gondar, asking that I might be given
a hearing by some high official.
The reply to my request was a summons
to appear before the officer to whom I had addressed
my appeal. A sergeant came for me along with
the interpreter, and I managed to obtain his permission
to let Victory accompany me—I had never
left her alone with the prisoners since we had been
captured.
To my delight I found that the officer
into whose presence we were conducted spoke Abyssinian
fluently. He was astounded when I told him that
I was a Pan-American. Unlike all others whom
I had spoken with since my arrival in Europe, he was
well acquainted with ancient history—was
familiar with twentieth century conditions in Pan-America,
and after putting a half dozen questions to me was
satisfied that I spoke the truth.
When I told him that Victory was Queen
of England he showed little surprise, telling me that
in their recent explorations in ancient Russia they
had found many descendants of the old nobility and
royalty.
He immediately set aside a comfortable
house for us, furnished us with servants and with
money, and in other ways showed us every attention
and kindness.
He told me that he would telegraph
his emperor at once, and the result was that we were
presently commanded to repair to Peking and present
ourselves before the ruler.
We made the journey in a comfortable
railway carriage, through a country which, as we traveled
farther toward the east, showed increasing evidence
of prosperity and wealth.
At the imperial court we were received
with great kindness, the emperor being most inquisitive
about the state of modern Pan-America. He told
me that while he personally deplored the existence
of the strict regulations which had raised a barrier
between the east and the west, he had felt, as had
his predecessors, that recognition of the wishes of
the great Pan-American federation would be most conducive
to the continued peace of the world.
His empire includes all of Asia, and
the islands of the Pacific as far east as 175dW.
The empire of Japan no longer exists, having been
conquered and absorbed by China over a hundred years
ago. The Philippines are well administered,
and constitute one of the most progressive colonies
of the Chinese empire.
The emperor told me that the building
of this great empire and the spreading of enlightenment
among its diversified and savage peoples had required
all the best efforts of nearly two hundred years.
Upon his accession to the throne he had found the
labor well nigh perfected and had turned his attention
to the reclamation of Europe.
His ambition is to wrest it from the
hands of the blacks, and then to attempt the work
of elevating its fallen peoples to the high estate
from which the Great War precipitated them.
I asked him who was victorious in
that war, and he shook his head sadly as he replied:
“Pan-America, perhaps, and China,
with the blacks of Abyssinia,” he said.
“Those who did not fight were the only ones
to reap any of the rewards that are supposed to belong
to victory. The combatants reaped naught but
annihilation. You have seen—better
than any man you must realize that there was no victory
for any nation embroiled in that frightful war.”
“When did it end?” I asked him.
Again he shook his head. “It
has not ended yet. There has never been a formal
peace declared in Europe. After a while there
were none left to make peace, and the rude tribes
which sprang from the survivors continued to fight
among themselves because they knew no better condition
of society. War razed the works of man—war
and pestilence razed man. God give that there
shall never be such another war!”
You all know how Porfirio Johnson
returned to Pan-America with John Alvarez in chains;
how Alvarez’s trial raised a popular demonstration
that the government could not ignore. His eloquent
appeal—not for himself, but for me—is
historic, as are its results. You know how a
fleet was sent across the Atlantic to search for me,
how the restrictions against crossing thirty to one
hundred seventy-five were removed forever, and how
the officers were brought to Peking, arriving upon
the very day that Victory and I were married at the
imperial court.
My return to Pan-America was very
different from anything I could possibly have imagined
a year before. Instead of being received as
a traitor to my country, I was acclaimed a hero.
It was good to get back again, good to witness the
kindly treatment that was accorded my dear Victory,
and when I learned that Delcarte and Taylor had been
found at the mouth of the Rhine and were already back
in Pan-America my joy was unalloyed.
And now we are going back, Victory
and I, with the men and the munitions and power to
reclaim England for her queen. Again I shall
cross thirty, but under what altered conditions!
A new epoch for Europe is inaugurated,
with enlightened China on the east and enlightened
Pan-America on the west— the two great
peace powers whom God has preserved to regenerate
chastened and forgiven Europe. I have been through
much—I have suffered much, but I have won
two great laurel wreaths beyond thirty. One
is the opportunity to rescue Europe from barbarism,
the other is a little barbarian, and the greater of
these is—Victory.