



Produced by Lynn Hill. Dedicated to Betty Sheridan. HTML
version by Al Haines.









THE BELGIAN TWINS


By

Lucy Fitch Perkins




Geographical Series

  THE DUTCH TWINS PRIMER. Grade I.
  THE DUTCH TWINS. Grade III.
  THE ESKIMO TWINS. Grade II.
  THE FILIPINO TWINS. Grade IV.
  THE JAPANESE TWINS. Grade IV.
  THE SWISS TWINS. Grade IV.
  THE IRISH TWINS. Grade V.
  THE ITALIAN TWINS. Grades V and VI.
  THE SCOTCH TWINS. Grades V and VI.
  THE MEXICAN TWINS. Grade VI.
  THE BELGIAN TWINS. Grade VI.
  THE FRENCH TWINS. Grade VII.

Historical Series

  THE CAVE TWINS. Grade IV.
  THE SPARTAN TWINS. Grades V-VI.
  THE PURITAN TWINS. Grades VI-VII.




To the friends of Belgian Children--




PREFACE

In this sad hour of the world's history, when so many homes have been
broken up, and so many hearts burdened with heavy sorrows, it is
comforting to think of the many heroic souls who, throughout the
struggle, have gone about their daily tasks with unfailing courage and
cheerfulness, and by so doing have helped to carry the burdens of the
world, and to sustain other hearts as heavy as their own.

It is comforting, also, to know that there are many instances of happy
reunions after long and unspeakable anxieties, adventures, and trials.

This story of two little Belgian refugees is based upon the actual
experience of two Belgian children, and the incident of the locket is
quite true.

The characters of the eel-woman and the mother of the Twins have also
their living originals, from whose courage and devotion the author has
received much inspiration.




CONTENTS

    I. THE HARVEST-FIELD
   II. THE RUMORS
  III. THE ALARM
   IV. "FOR KING, FOR LAW AND LIBERTY"
    V. DOING A MAN'S WORK
   VI. AT THE CHURCH
  VII. THE TIDAL WAVE OF GERMANS
 VIII. GRANNY AND THE EELS
   IX. OFF FOR ANTWERP
    X. ON THE TOW-PATH
   XI. THE ATTACK
  XII. THE ZEPPELIN RAID
 XIII. REFUGEES
  XIV. THE MOST WONDERFUL PART




THE BELGIAN TWINS



I

THE HARVEST-FIELD

It was late in the afternoon of a long summer's day in Belgium. Father
Van Hove was still at work in the harvest-field, though the sun hung so
low in the west that his shadow, stretching far across the level, green
plain, reached almost to the little red-roofed house on the edge of the
village which was its home. Another shadow, not so long, and quite a
little broader, stretched itself beside his, for Mother Van Hove was
also in the field, helping her husband to load the golden sheaves upon
an old blue farm-cart which stood near by.

Them were also two short, fat shadows which bobbed briskly about over
the green meadow as their owners danced among the wheat-sheaves or
carried handfuls of fresh grass to Pier, the patient white farm-horse,
hitched to the cart. These gay shadows belonged to Jan and Marie,
sometimes called by their parents Janke and Mie, for short. Jan and
Marie were the twin son and daughter of Father and Mother Van Hove, and
though they were but eight years old, they were already quite used to
helping their father and mother with the work of their little farm.

They knew how to feed the chickens and hunt the eggs and lead Pier to
water and pull weeds in the garden. In the spring they had even helped
sow the wheat and barley, and now in the late summer they were helping
to harvest the grain.

The children had been in the field since sunrise, but not all of the
long bright day had been given to labor. Early in the morning their
father's pitchfork had uncovered a nest of field mice, and the Twins
had made another nest, as much like the first as possible, to put the
homeless field babies in, hoping that their mother would find them
again and resume her interrupted housekeeping.

Then they had played for a long time in the tiny canal which separated
the wheat-field from the meadow, where Bel, their black and white cow,
was pastured. There was also Fidel, the dog, their faithful companion
and friend. The children had followed him on many an excursion among
the willows along the river-bank, for Fidel might at any moment come
upon the rabbit or water rat which he was always seeking, and what a
pity it would be for Jan and Marie to miss a sight like that!

When the sun was high overhead, the whole family, and Fidel also, had
rested under a tree by the little river, and Jan and Marie had shared
with their father and mother the bread and cheese which had been
brought from home for their noon meal. Then they had taken a nap in the
shade, for it is a long day that begins and ends with the midsummer
sun. The bees hummed so drowsily in the clover that Mother Van Hove
also took forty winks, while Father Van Hove led Pier to the river for
a drink; and tied him where he could enjoy the rich meadow grass for a
while.

And now the long day was nearly over. The last level rays of the
disappearing sun glistened on the red roofs of the village, and the
windows of the little houses gave back an answering flash of light. On
the steeple of the tiny church the gilded cross shone like fire against
the gray of the eastern sky.

The village clock struck seven and was answered faintly by the sound of
distant chimes from the Cathedral of Malines, miles away across the
plain.

For some time Father Van Hove had been standing on top of the load,
catching the sheaves which Mother Van Hove tossed up to him, and
stowing them away in the farm-wagon, which was already heaped high with
the golden grain. As the clock struck, he paused in his labor, took off
his hat, and wiped his brow. He listened for a moment to the music of
the bells, glanced at the western sky, already rosy with promise of the
sunset, and at the weather-cock above the cross on the church-steeple.
Then he looked down at the sheaves of wheat, still standing like tiny
tents across the field.

"It's no use, Mother," he said at last; "we cannot put it all in
to-night, but the sky gives promise of a fair day to-morrow, and the
weather-cock, also, points east. We can finish in one more load; let us
go home now."

"The clock struck seven," cried Jan. "I counted the strokes."

"What a scholar is our Janke!" laughed his mother, as she lifted the
last sheaf of wheat on her fork and tossed it at Father Van Hove's
feet. "He can count seven when it is supper-time! As for me, I do not
need a clock; I can tell the time of day by the ache in my bones; and,
besides that, there is Bel at the pasture bars waiting to be milked and
bellowing to call me."

"I don't need a clock either," chimed in Marie, patting her apron
tenderly; "I can tell time by my stomach. It's a hundred years since we
ate our lunch; I know it is."

"Come, then, my starvelings," said Mother Van Hove, pinching Marie's
fat cheek, "and you shall save your strength by riding home on the
load! Here, Ma mie, up you go!"

She swung Marie into the air as she spoke. Father Van Hove reached down
from his perch on top of the load, caught her in his arms, and
enthroned her upon the fragrant grain.

"And now it is your turn, my Janke!" cried Mother Van Hove, "and you
shall ride on the back of old Pier like a soldier going to the wars!"
She lifted Jan to the horse's back, while Father Van Hove climbed down
to earth once more and took up the reins.

Fidel came back dripping wet from the river, shook himself, and fell in
behind the wagon. "U--U!" cried Father Van Hove to old Pier, and the
little procession moved slowly up the cart-path toward the shining
windows of their red-roofed house.

The home of the Van Hoves lay on the very outskirts of the little
hamlet of Meer. Beside it ran a yellow ribbon of road which stretched
across the green plain clear to the city of Malines. As they turned
from the cart-path into the road, the old blue cart became part of a
little profession of similar wagons, for the other men of Meer were
also late in coming home to the village from their outlying farms.

"Good-evening, neighbor," cried Father Van Hove to Father Maes, whose
home lay beyond his in the village. "How are your crops coming on?"

"Never better," answered Father Maes; "I have more wheat to the acre
than ever before."

"So have I, thanks be to the good God;" answered Father Van Hove. "The
winter will find our barns full this year."

"Yes," replied Father Maes a little sadly; "that is, if we have no bad
luck, but Jules Verhulst was in the city yesterday and heard rumors of
a German army on our borders. It is very likely only an idle tale to
frighten the women and children, but Jules says there are men also who
believe it."

"I shall believe nothing of the sort," said Father Van Hove stoutly.
"Are we not safe under the protection of our treaty? No, no, neighbor,
there's nothing to fear! Belgium is neutral ground."

"I hope you may be right," answered Father Maes, cracking his whip, and
the cart moved on.

Mother Van Hove, meanwhile, had hastened ahead of the cart to stir up
the kitchen fire and put the kettle on before the others should reach
home, and when Father Van Hove at last drove into the farmyard, she was
already on the way to the pasture bars with her milk-pail on her arm.
"Set the table for supper, ma Mie," she called back, "and do not let
the pot boil over! Jan, you may shut up the fowls; they have already
gone to roost."

"And what shall I do, Mother?" laughed Father Van Hove.

"You," she called back, "you may unharness Pier and turn him out in the
pasture for the night! And I'll wager I shall be back with a full
milk-pail before you've even so much as fed the pig, let alone the
other chores--men are so slow!" She waved her hand gayly and
disappeared behind the pasture bars, as she spoke.

"Hurry, now, my man," said Father Van Hove to Jan. "We must not let
Mother beat us! We will let the cart stand right there near the barn,
and to-morrow we can store the grain away to make room for a new load.
I will let you lead Pier to the pasture, while I feed the pig myself;
by her squeals she is hungry enough to eat you up in one mouthful."



II

THE RUMORS

When Mother Van Hove returned from the pasture, fifteen minutes later,
her orders had all been carried out. Pier was in the pasture, the hens
were shut up for the night, and the pig, which had been squealing with
hunger, was row grunting with satisfaction over her evening meal; Fidel
was gnawing a bone, and Father Van Hove was already washing his hands
at the pump, beside the kitchen door.

"You are all good children," said the mother as she set down her
brimming pail and took her turn at the wash-basin and the soap. "Jan
and Marie, have you washed your hands?"

"I have," called Marie from the kitchen, "and supper is ready and the
table set."

"I washed my hands in the canal this morning," pleaded Jan. "Won't that
do?"

"You ate your lunch this noon, too," answered his mother promptly.
"Won't that do? Why do you need to eat again when you have already
eaten twice today?"

"Because I am hungry again," answered Jan.

"Well, you are also dirty again," said his mother, as she put the soap
in his hands and wiped her own on the clean towel which Marie handed
her from the door. She cleaned her wooden shoes on the bundle of straw
which lay for the purpose beside the kitchen door; then she went inside
and took her place opposite Father Van Hove at the little round oaken
table by the window.

Marie was already in her chair, and in a moment Jan joined them with a
beaming smile and a face which, though clean in the middle, showed a
gray border from ear to ear.

"If you don't believe I'm clean, look at the towel!" he said, holding
it up.

"Oh, my heart!" cried his mother, throwing up her hands. "I declare
there's but one creature in all God's world that cares nothing for
cleanliness! Even a pig has some manners if given half a chance, but
boys!" She seized the grimy towel and held it up despairingly for
Father Van Hove to see. "He's just wet his face and wiped all the dirt
off on the towel. The Devil himself is not more afraid of holy water
than Jan Van Hove is of water of any kind!" she cried.

"Go and wash yourself properly, Janke," said his father sternly, and
Jan disappeared through the kitchen door. Sounds of vigorous pumping
and splashing without were heard in the kitchen, and when Jan appeared
once more, he was allowed to take his place at the supper-table with
the family.

Father Van Hove bowed his head, and the Twins and their mother made the
sign of the cross with him, as he began their grace before meat. "In
the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, Amen,"
prayed Father Van Hove. "Hail, Mary, full of Grace." Then, as the
prayer continued, the mother and children with folded hands and bowed
heads joined in the petition: "Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us
sinners now and in the hour of our death, Amen." A clatter of spoons
followed the grace, and Mother Van Hove's good buttermilk pap was not
long in disappearing down their four hungry throats.

The long day in the open air had made the children so sleepy they could
scarcely keep their eyes open through the meal. "Come, my children,"
said their mother briskly, as she rose from the table, "pop into bed,
both of you, as fast as you can go. You are already half asleep!
Father, you help them with their buttons, and hear them say their
prayers, while I wash up these dishes and take care of the milk." She
took a candle from the chimney-piece as she spoke, and started down
cellar with the skimmer. When she came back into the kitchen once more,
the children were safely tucked in bed, and her husband was seated by
the kitchen door with his chair tipped back against the wall, smoking
his evening pipe. Mother Van Hove cleared the table, washed the dishes,
and brushed the crumbs from the tiled floor. Then she spread the white
sand once more under the table and in a wide border around the edge of
the room, and hung the brush outside the kitchen door.

Father Van Hove smoked in silence as she moved about the room. At last
he said to her, "Leonie, did you hear what our neighbor Maes said
to-night as we were talking in the road?"

"No," said his wife, "I was hurrying home to get supper."

"Maes said there are rumors of a German army on our frontier," said
Father Van Hove.

His wife paused in front of him with her hands on her hips. "Who
brought that story to town?" she demanded.

"Jules Verhulst," answered her husband.

"Jules Verhulst!" sniffed Mother Van Hove with disdain. "He knows more
things that aren't so than any man in this village. I wouldn't believe
anything on his say-so! Besides, the whole world knows that all the
Powers have agreed that Belgium shall be neutral ground, and have bound
themselves solemnly to protect that neutrality. I learned that in
school, and so did you."

"Yes," sighed Father Van Hove. "I learned it too, and surely no nation
can have anything against us! We have given no one cause for complaint
that I know of."

"It's nonsense," said his wife with decision. "Belgium is safe enough
so far as that goes, but one certainly has to work hard here just to
make ends meet and get food for all the hungry mouths! They say it is
different in America; there you work less and get more, and are farther
away from meddlesome neighboring countries besides. I sometimes wish we
had gone there with my sister. She and her husband started with no more
than we have, and now they are rich--at least they were when I last
heard from them; but that was a long time ago," she finished.

"Well," said Father Van Hove, as he stood up and knocked the ashes from
his pipe, "it may be that they have more money and less work, but I've
lived here in this spot ever since I was born, and my father before me.
Somehow I feel I could never take root in any other soil. I'm content
with things as they are."

"So am I, for the matter of that," said Mother Van Hove cheerfully, as
she put Fidel outside and shut the door for the night. Then, taking the
candle from the chimney-piece once more, she led the way to the inner
room, where the twins were already soundly sleeping.



III

THE ALARM

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 le Roi!"

"Vive le 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.



IV

"FOR KING, FOR LAW AND LIBERTY"

At the gate they were met by an officer, who at once took command of
the company. There was only a moment for hasty good-byes before the
order to march was given, and the women and children watched the little
column stride bravely away up the street toward the armory, where the
uniforms and arms were kept. They followed at a little distance and
took up their station across the street from the great doors through
which the men had disappeared. There was little talking among them.
Only the voice of the priest could be heard now and then, as he said a
few words to one and another of the waiting women. It was still so
early in the morning that the streets of the city were not yet filled
with people going to work. Only those, like themselves, concerned with
the sad business of war were abroad.

To Jan and Marie the long wait seemed endless, but at last the doors of
the armory sprang open; there was a burst of martial music, and a band
playing the national hymn appeared. "For King, for law and liberty!"
thrilled the bugles, and amidst the waving of flags, and the cheers of
the people, who had now begun to fill the streets, a regiment of
soldiers marched away toward the north. Jan and Marie stood with their
mother on the edge of the sidewalk, eagerly scanning every face as the
soldiers passed, and at last Jan shouted, "I see Father! I see Father!"

Mother Van Hove lifted her two children high in her arms for him to
see, but Father Van Hove could only smile a brave good-bye as he
marched swiftly past.

"No tears, my children!" cried the priest; "let them see no tears! Send
them away with a smile!" And, standing on the edge of the sidewalk, he
made the sign of the cross and raised his hand in blessing, as the
troops went by.

For a time Mother Van Hove and the children ran along the sidewalk,
trying to keep pace with the soldiers, but their quick strides were too
much for the Twins, and it was not long before Marie said,
breathlessly, "My legs are too short! I can't run so fast!"

"I can't too!" gasped Jan. Mother Van Hove stopped short at once, and
the three stood still, hand in hand, and watched the soldiers until
they turned a corner and disappeared from sight through the Antwerp
gate of the city.

They were quite alone, for the other women and children had gone no
farther than the armory, and were already on their homeward way to
Meer. Now for the first time Mother Van Hove gave way to grief, and Jan
and Marie wept with her; but it was only for a moment. Then she wiped
her eyes, and the Twins' too, on her apron, and said firmly: "Come, my
lambs! Tears will not bring him back! We must go home now as fast as we
can. There is need there for all that we can do! You must be the man of
the house now, my Janke, and help me take your father's place on the
farm; and Marie must be our little house-mother. We must be as brave as
soldiers, even though we cannot fight."

"I think I could be braver if I had some breakfast," sobbed Janke.

Mother Van Hove struck her hands together in dismay. "I never once
thought of food!" she cried, "and I haven't a red cent with me! We
cannot buy a breakfast! We must just go hungry until we get home! But
soldiers must often go hungry, my little ones. We must be as brave as
they. Come, now. I will be the captain! Forward march!"

Jan and Marie stiffened their little backs, as she gave the word of
command, and, shoulder to shoulder, they marched down the street toward
the city gate to the martial refrain, "Le Roi, la loi, la liberte,"
which Mother Van Hove hummed for them under her breath.

It was a long way back to the little farm-house, and when at last the
three weary pilgrims reached it, they were met by an indignant chorus
of protests from all the creatures which had been left behind. Bel was
lowing at the pasture bars, the pig was squealing angrily in her pen,
the rooster had crowed himself hoarse, and Fidel, patient Fidel, was
sitting on guard at the back door.

Mother Van Hove flew into the kitchen the moment she reached the house,
and in two minutes Jan and Marie were seated before a breakfast of
bread and milk. Then she fed the pig, let out the hens, and gave Fidel
a bone which she had saved for him from the soup. Last of all, she
milked the cow, and when this was done, and she had had a cup of coffee
herself, the clock in the steeple struck twelve.

Even Mother Van Hove's strength was not equal to work in the
harvest-field that day, but she stowed the load of wheat which had been
brought home the night before in the barn, and, after the chores were
done at night, she and the Twins went straight to bed and slept as only
the very weary can, until the sun streamed into their windows in the
morning.



V

DOING A MAN'S WORK

When Jan and Marie awoke, their mother's bed was empty. "She's gone to
milk the cow," cried Marie. "Come, Jan, we will surprise her! When she
comes back from the pasture, we will have breakfast all ready."

"You can," said Jan, as he struggled into his clothes, and twisted
himself nearly in two trying to do up the buttons in the back; "you
can, but I must do a man's work! I will go out and feed the pig and
catch old Pier and hitch him to the cart," he said importantly. "I must
finish the wheat harvest to-day."

"Ho!" said Marie. "You will spill the pig-feed all over yourself! You
are such a messy boy!"

"I guess I can do it just as well as you can make coffee," said Jan
with spirit. "You've never made coffee in your life!"

"I've watched Mother do it lots of times," said Marie. "I'm sure I can
do it just the same way."

"All right, let's see you do it, then," said Jan. And he strode out of
the room with his hands in his pockets, taking as long steps as his
short legs would permit.

When she was dressed and washed, Marie ran to the pump and filled the
kettle. Then she stirred the embers of the fire in the kitchen and put
on fresh coal. She set the kettle on to boil and only slopped a little
water on her apron in doing so. Then she put the dishes on the table.

Meanwhile she heard no sound from Jan. She went to the kitchen door and
looked out. Jan had already let out the fowls, and was just in the act
of feeding the pig. He had climbed up on the fence around the pig-pen,
and by dint of great effort had succeeded in lifting the heavy pail of
feed to the top of it. He was now trying to let it down on the other
side and pour the contents into the trough, but the pig was greedy, and
the moment the pail came within reach, she stuck her nose and her fore
feet into it. This added weight was too much for poor Jan; down went
the pail with a crash into the trough, and Jan himself tumbled suddenly
forward, his feet flew out behind, and he was left hanging head down,
like a jack knife, over the fence!

It was just at this moment that Marie came to the door, and when she
saw Jan balancing on the fence and kicking out wildly with his feet,
she screamed with laughter.

Jan was screaming, too, but with pain and indignation. "Come here and
pick me off this fence!" he roared. "It's cutting me in two! Oh,
Mother! Mother!"

Marie ran to the pigpen as fast as, she could go. She snatched an old
box by the stable as she ran, and, placing it against the fence, seized
one of Jan's feet, which were still waving wildly in the air, and
planted it firmly on the box.

"Oh! Oh!" laughed Marie, as Jan reached the ground once more. "If you
could only have seen yourself, Jan! You would have laughed, too!
Instead of pouring the pig-feed on to yourself, you poured yourself on
to the pig-feed!"

"I don't see anything to laugh at," said Jan with dignity; "it might
have happened to any man."

"Anyway, you'll have to get the pail again," said Marie, wiping her
eyes. "That greedy pig will bang it all to pieces, if you leave it in
the pen."

"I can't reach it," said Jan.

"Yes, you can," said Marie. "I'll hold your legs so you won't fall in,
and you can fish for it with a stick." She ran for a stick to poke
with, while Jan bravely mounted the box again, and, firmly anchored by
Marie's grasp upon his legs, he soon succeeded in rescuing the pail.

"Anyway, I guess I've fed the pig just as well as you have made the
coffee," he said, as he handed it over to Marie.

"Oh, my sakes!" cried Marie; "I forgot all about the coffee!" And she
ran back to the kitchen, to find that the kettle had boiled over and
put the fire out.

Jan stuck hid head in the door, just as she got the bellows to start
the fire again. "What did I tell you!" he shouted, running out his
tongue derisively.

"Scat!" said Marie, shaking the bellows at him, and Jan sauntered away
toward the pasture with Pier's halter over his arm.

Pier had been eating grass for two nights and a day without doing any
work, and it took Jan some time to catch him and put the halter over
his head. When at last he returned from the pasture, red and tired, but
triumphant, leading Pier, Marie and her mother had already finished
their breakfast.

"Look what a man we have!" cried Mother Van Hove as Jan appeared. "He
has caught Pier all by himself."

"He lifted me clear off my feet when I put his halter on," said Jan
proudly, "but I hung on and he had to come!"

"Marie," cried her mother, "our Jan has earned a good breakfast! Cook
an egg for him, while I hitch Pier to the cart. Then, while he and I
work in the field, you can put the house in order. There is only one
more load to bring in, and we can do that by ourselves."

By noon the last of the wheat had been garnered, and this time Jan
drove Pier home, while his mother sat on the load. In the afternoon the
three unloaded the wagon and stowed the grain away in the barn to be
threshed; and when the long day's work was over, and they had eaten
their simple supper of bread and milk, Mother Van Hove and the children
went together down the village street to see their neighbors and hear
the news, if there should be any.

There were no daily papers in Meer, and now there were no young men to
go to the city and bring back the gossip of the day, as there had used
to be. The women, with their babies on their arms, stood about in the
street, talking quietly and sadly among themselves. On the doorsteps a
few old men lingered together over their pipes. Already the bigger boys
were playing soldier, with paper caps on their heads, and sticks for
guns. The smaller children were shouting and chasing each other through
the little street of the village. Jan and Marie joined in a game of
blindman's buff, while Mother Van Hove stopped with the group of women.

"If we only knew what to expect!" sighed the Burgomeister's wife, as
she shifted her baby from one arm to the other. "It seems as if we
should know better what to do. In a day or two I shall send my big boy
Leon to the city for a paper. It is hard to wait quietly and know
nothing."

"Our good King and Queen doubtless know everything," said the wife of
Boer Maes. "They will do better for us than we could do for ourselves,
even if we knew all that they do."

"And there are our own brave men, besides," added Mother Van Hove. "We
must not forget them! We are not yet at war. I pray God we may not be,
and that we shall soon see them come marching home again to tell us
that the trouble, whatever it is, is over, and that we may go on living
in peace as we did before."

"It seems a year since yesterday," said the Burgomeister's wife.

"Work makes the time pass quickly," said Mother Van Hove cheerfully.
"Jan and I got in the last of our wheat to-day. He helped me like a
man."

"Who will thresh it for you?" asked the wife of Boer Maes.

"I will thresh it myself, if need be," said Mother Van Hove with
spirit. "My good man shall not come home and find the farm-work behind
if I can help it." And with these brave words she said good-night to
the other women, called Jan and Marie, and turned once more down the
street toward the little house on the edge of the village. Far across
the peaceful twilight fields came the sound of distant bells. "Hark!"
said Mother Van Hove to the Twins--"the cathedral bells of Malines! And
they are playing 'The Lion of Flanders!'"

(three lines of music)

sang the bells, and, standing upon the threshold of her little home,
with head held proudly erect, Mother Van Hove lifted her voice and
joined the words to the melody. "They will never conquer him, the old
Lion of Flanders, so long as he has claws!" she sang, and the Twins,
looking up into her brave and inspired face, sang too.



VI

AT THE CHURCH

Several days passed quietly by in the little village of Meer. The sun
shone, and the wind blew, and the rains fell upon the peaceful fields,
just as if nothing whatever had happened. Each day was filled to the
brim with hard work. With the help of the Twins, Mother Van Hove kept
the garden free of weeds and took care of the stock. She even threshed
the wheat herself with her husband's flail, and stored the grain away
in sacks ready for the mill. Each evening, when the work was done, the
three went down the village street together. One evening, just at dusk,
they found nearly the whole village gathered in front of the priest's
house next to the church. Leon, the Burgomeister's oldest boy, had been
to Malines that day and had brought back a paper.

The priest was reading from it to the anxious group gathered about him.
"Oh, my children," he was saying, as Mother Van Hove and the Twins
joined the group, "there is, no doubt, need for courage, but where is
there a Belgian lacking in that? Even Julius Caesar, two thousand years
ago, found that out! The bravest of all are the Belgians, he said then,
and it is none the less true to-day! The Germans have crossed our
eastern frontier. It is reported that they are already burning towns
and killing the inhabitants if they resist. God knows what may be
before us. Our good King Albert has asked Parliament to refuse the
demands of the Germans. In spite of their solemn treaty with us, they
demand that we permit them to cross Belgium to attack France. To this
our brave King and Parliament will never consent; no true Belgian would
wish them to. There is, then, this choice either to submit absolutely
to the invasion of our country, or to defend it! The army is already in
the field."

There was a moment of heavy silence as he finished speaking. Then the
voice of the Burgomeister's wife was heard in the stillness. "Oh,
Mynheer Pastoor," she said to the priest, "what shall we do? There is
no place to go to we have no refuge!"

"God is our refuge and strength, my children," said the priest, lifting
his eyes to heaven. "We have no other! You must stay here, and if the
terrible Germans come, hide yourselves away as best you can, until they
have passed by. Do not anger them by resisting. Bow your heads to the
storm and have faith in God that it may soon pass over." He turned and
led the way toward the little church as he spoke. "Come," he said, "let
us pray before God's holy altar, and if the enemy comes, seek refuge in
the church itself. Surely even the Germans will respect the sanctuary."

Solemnly the people filed into the little church, lighted only by the
candles on the altar, and knelt upon the hard floor. The priest left
them there, praying silently, while he went to put on the robes of his
offices. Then once more he appeared before the altar, and led the
kneeling congregation in the litany.

"From war and pestilence and sudden death, Good Lord, deliver us," he
prayed at last, and all the people responded with a fervent "Amen."

That night, when she put her children to bed, Mother Van Hove fastened
a chain with a locket upon it about Marie's neck. "Listen, ma Mie," she
said, "and you, too, my little Jan. God only knows what may be before
us. This locket contains my picture. You must wear it always about your
neck, and remember that your mother's name is Leonie Van Hove, and your
father's name is Georges Van Hove. If by any chance--which God
forbid--we should become separated from one another, keep the locket on
your neck, and our names in your memory until we meet again; for if
such a thing should happen, do not doubt that I should find you, though
I had to swim the sea to do it! For you, my Jan, I have no locket, but
you are a man, a brave man, now! You must take care of yourself and
your sister, too, if need should arise, and above all, remember
this--only the brave are safe. Whatever happens, you must remember that
you are Belgians, and be brave!"

The children clung to her, weeping, as she finished. "There, there,"
she said soothingly: "I had to tell you this so you would be ready to
do your best and not despair, whatever might happen, but be sure, my
lambs, nothing shall harm you if I can help it, and nothing shall
separate us from one another if God so wills. Now, go to sleep!"

She kissed them tenderly, and, quite comforted, they nestled down in
their beds and soon were asleep. She herself slept but little that
night. Long after the children were quiet, she sat alone on the kitchen
step in the darkness with Fidel by her side, and listened to the faint
sounds of distant guns, and watched the red light in the sky, which
told her of the burning of Louvain.



VII

THE TIDAL WAVE OF GERMANS

The next morning dawned bright and clear, and Mother Van Hove and the
Twins went about their work as usual. The sunshine was so bright, and
the whole countryside looked so peaceful and fair, it was impossible to
believe that the terrors of the night could be true.

"To-day we must begin to gather the potatoes," said Mother Van Hove
after breakfast. "Jan, you get the fork and hoe and put them in the
wagon, while I milk the cow and Marie puts up some bread and cheese for
us to take to the field." She started across the road to the pasture,
with Fidel at her heels, as she spoke. In an instant she was back
again, her eyes wide with horror. "Look! Look!" she cried.

The dazed children looked toward the east as she pointed. There in the
distance, advancing like a great tidal wave, was a long gray line of
soldiers on horseback. Already they could hear the sound of music and
the throb of drums; already the sun glistened upon the shining helmets
and the cruel points of bayonets. The host stretched away across the
plain as far as the eye could reach, and behind them the sky was thick
with the smoke of fires.

"The church! the church!" cried Mother Van Hove. "No, there is not
time. Hide in here, my darlings. Quickly! Quickly!"

She tore open the door of the earth-covered vegetable cellar as she
spoke, and thrust Jan and Marie inside. Fidel bolted in after them. "Do
not move or make a sound until all is quiet again," she cried as she
closed the door.

There was not room for her too, in the cellar, and if there had been,
Mother Van Hove would not have taken it, for it was necessary to close
the door from the outside. This she did, hastily, throwing some straw
before it. Then she rushed into the house and, snatching up her shining
milk-pans, flung them upon the straw, as if they were placed there to
be sweetened by the sun. No one would think to look under a pile of
pans for hidden Belgians, she felt sure.

Nearer and nearer came the hosts, and now she could hear the sound of
singing as from ten thousand brazen throats, "Deutschland, Deutschland
uber Alles," roared the mighty chorus, and in another moment the little
village of Meer was submerged in the terrible gray flood.

At last, after what seemed to the imprisoned children like a year of
darkness and dread, and of strange, terrifying noises of all kinds, the
sound of horses' hoofs and marching feet died away in the distance, and
Jan ventured to push open the door of the cavern a crack, just
intending to peep out. Immediately there was a crash of falling
tinware. Jan quickly drew back again into the safe darkness and waited.
As nothing further happened, he peeped out again. This time Fidel,
springing forward, flung the doors wide open, and dashed out into the
sunshine with a joyous bark.

In a moment more Jan and Marie also crawled out of their hiding-place
after him. For an instant, as they came out into the daylight, it
seemed to the children as if they had awakened from a dreadful dream.
There stood the farmhouse just as before, with the kitchen door wide
open and the sun streaming in upon the sanded floor. There were only
the marks of many feet in the soft earth of the farmyard, an empty
pigpen, and a few chicken feathers blowing about the hen house, to show
where the invaders had been and what they had carried away with them.
Jan and Marie, followed by Fidel, ran through the house. From the front
door, which opened on the road; they could see the long gray line
sweeping across the fields toward Malines.

"The storm has passed," cried Marie, sobbing with grief, "just as
Mynheer Pastoor said it would! Mother! Mother, where are you?" They ran
from kitchen to bedroom and back again, their terror increasing at
every step, as no voice answered their call. They searched the cellar
and the loft; they looked in the stable and barn, and even in the
dog-house. Their mother was nowhere to be found!

"I know where she must be," cried Jan, at last. "You know Mynheer
Pastoor said, if anything happened, we should hide in the church." Led
by this hope, the two children sped, hand in hand, toward the village.
"Bel is gone!" gasped Jan, as they passed the pasture bars. "Pier,
too," sobbed Marie. Down the whole length of the deserted village
street they flew, with Fidel following close at their heels. When they
came to the little church, they burst open the door and looked in. The
cheerful sun streamed through the windows, falling in brilliant patches
of light upon the floor, but the church was silent and empty. It was
some time before they could realize that there was not a human being
but themselves in the entire village; all the others had been driven
away like sheep, before the invading army. When at last the terrible
truth dawned upon them, the two frightened children sat down upon the
church steps in the silence, and clung, weeping, to each other. Fidel
whined and licked their hands, as though he, too, understood and felt
their loneliness.

"What shall we do? What shall we do?" moaned Marie.

"There's nobody to tell us what to do," sobbed Jan. "We must just do
the best we can by ourselves."

"We can't stay here alone!" said Marie.

"But where can we go?" cried Jan. "There's no place for us to go to!"

For a few minutes the two children wept their hearts out in utter
despair, but hope always comes when it is most needed, and soon Marie
raised her head and wiped her eyes.

"Don't you remember what Mother said when she put the locket on my
neck, Jan?" she asked. "She said that she would find us, even if she
had to swim the sea! She said no matter what happened we should never
despair, and here we are despairing as hard as ever we can."

Jan threw up his chin, and straightened his back. "Yes," he said,
swallowing his sobs, "and she said I was now a man and must take care
of myself and you."

"What shall we do, then?" asked Marie.

Jan thought hard for a moment. Then he said: "Eat! It must be late, and
we have not had a mouthful to-day."

Marie stood up. "Yes," said she; "we must eat. Let us go back home."

The clock in the steeple struck eleven as the two children ran once
more through the deserted street and began a search for food in their
empty house.

They found that the invaders had been as thorough within the house as
without. Not only had they carried away the grain which their mother
had worked so hard to thresh, but they had cleaned the cupboard as
well. The hungry children found nothing but a few crusts of bread, a
bit of cheese, and some milk in the cellar, but with these and two
eggs, which Jan knew where to look for in the straw in the barn, they
made an excellent breakfast. They gave Fidel the last of the milk, and
then, much refreshed, made ready to start upon a strange and lonely
journey the end of which they did not know. They tied their best
clothes in a bundle, which Jan hung upon a stick over his shoulder, and
were just about to leave the house, when Marie cried out, "Suppose
Mother should come back and find us gone!"

"We must leave word where we have gone, so she will know where to look
for us, of course," Jan answered capably.

"Yes, but how?" persisted Marie. "There's no one to leave word with!"

This was a hard puzzle, but Jan soon found a way out. "We must write a
note and pin it up where she would be sure to find it," he said.

"The very thing," said Marie.

They found a bit of charcoal and a piece of wrapping-paper, and Jan was
all ready to write when a new difficulty presented itself. "What shall
I say?" he said to Marie. "We don't know where we are going!"

"We don't know the way to any place but Malines," said Marie; "so we'll
have to go there, I suppose."

"How do you spell Malines?" asked Jan, charcoal in hand.

"Oh, you stupid boy!" cried Marie. "M-a-l-i-n-e-s, of course!"

Jan put the paper down on the kitchen floor and got down before it on
his hands and knees. He had not yet learned to write, but he managed to
print upon it in great staggering letters:--

"DEAR MOTHER

WE HAVE GONE TO MALINES TO FIND YOU.

JAN AND MARIE."


This note they pinned upon the inside of the kitchen door.

"Now we are ready to start," said Jan; and, calling Fidel, the two
children set forth. They took a short cut from the house across the
pasture to the potato-field. Here they dug a few potatoes, which they
put in their bundle, and then, avoiding the road, slipped down to the
river, and, following the stream, made their way toward Malines.

It was fortunate for them that, screened by the bushes and trees which
fringed the bank of the river, they saw but little of the ruin and
devastation left in the wake of the German hosts. There were farmers
who had tried to defend their families and homes from the invaders.
Burning houses and barns marked the places where they had lived and
died. But the children, thinking only of their lost mother, and of
keeping themselves as much out of sight as possible in their search for
her, were spared most of these horrors. Their progress was slow, for
the bundle was heavy, and the river path less direct than the road, and
it was nightfall before the two little waifs, with Fidel at their
heels, reached the well-remembered Brussels gate.

Their hearts almost stopped beating when they found it guarded by a
German soldier. "Who goes there?" demanded the guard gruffly, as he
caught sight of the little figures.

"If you please, sir, it's Jan and Marie," said Jan, shaking in his
boots.

"And Fidel, too," said Marie.

The soldier bent down and looked closely at the two tear-stained little
faces. It may be that some remembrance of other little faces stirred
within him, for he only said stiffly, "Pass, Jan and Marie, and you,
too, Fidel." And the two children and the dog hurried through the gate
and up the first street they came to, their bundle bumping along behind
them as they ran.

The city seemed strangely silent and deserted, except for the gray-clad
soldiers, and armed guards blocked the way at intervals. Taught by
fear, Jan and Marie soon learned to slip quietly along under cover of
the gathering darkness, and to dodge into a doorway or round a corner,
when they came too near one of the stiff, helmeted figures.

At last, after an hour of aimless wandering, they found themselves in a
large, open square, looking up at the tall cathedral spires. A German
soldier came suddenly out of the shadows, and the frightened children,
scarcely knowing what they did, ran up the cathedral steps and flung
themselves against the door. When the soldier had passed by, they
reached cautiously up, and by dint of pulling with their united
strength succeeded at last in getting the door open. They thrust their
bundle inside, pushed Fidel in after it, and then slipped through
themselves. The great door closed behind them on silent hinges and they
were alone in the vast stillness of the cathedral. Timidly they crept
toward the lights of the altar, and, utterly exhausted, slept that
night on the floor near the statue of the Madonna, with their heads
pillowed on Fidel's shaggy side.



VIII

GRANNY AND THE EELS

When the cathedral bells rang the next morning for early mass, the
children were still sleeping the sleep of utter exhaustion. It was not
until the bells had ceased to ring, and the door, opening from the
sacristy near their resting place, creaked upon its hinges, that even
Fidel was aroused. True to his watchdog instincts, he started to his
feet with a low growl, letting the heads of Jan and Marie down upon the
floor with a sudden bump. For an instant the awakened children could
not remember where they were or what had happened to them. They sat up
and rubbed their heads, but the habit of fear was already so strong
upon them that they made no sound and instantly quieted Fidel. Again
the door creaked, and through it there appeared a tall figure dressed
in priestly robes. The children were so near that had they thrust their
hands through the railing of the communion bank behind which they were
concealed, they might have touched him as he passed before the altar of
the Virgin and presented himself in front of the high altar to conduct
the mass. His head, as he passed them, was bowed. His face was pale and
thin, and marked with lines of deep sorrow.

"Oh," whispered Marie to Jan, "it must be the Cardinal himself. Mother
told me about him."

The whisper made such a loud sound in the silence of the great
cathedral aisles that Jan was afraid to reply. For answer he only laid
his finger upon his lips and crept still farther back into the shadow.
Fidel seemed to know that dogs were not allowed in church and that it
was necessary for him to be quiet, too, for he crawled back with the
children into the sheltering darkness.

There were only a few persons in the cathedral, and those few were near
the door; so no one saw the children as they knelt with folded hands
and bowed heads in their corner, reverently following the service as
the Cardinal ate the sacred wafer and drank the communion wine before
the altar. Later they were to know his face as the bravest and best
beloved in all Belgium next to those of the King and Queen themselves.

When again he passed the kneeling little figures on his return to the
sacristy, their lonely hearts so ached for care and protection, and his
face looked so kind and pitiful, that they almost dared to make their
presence known and to ask for the help they sorely needed. Marie,
bolder than Jan, half rose as he passed, but Jan pulled her back, and
in another instant the door had closed behind him and he was gone.

"Oh," sobbed Marie under her breath, "he looked so kind! He might have
helped us. Why did you pull me back?"

"How could we let him see Fidel, and tell him that our dog had slept
all night before the altar?" answered Jan. "I shouldn't dare! He is a
great Prince of the Church!"

The sound of scraping chairs told them that the little congregation had
risen from its knees and was passing out of the church. They waited
until every one had disappeared through the great door, and then made a
swift flight down the echoing aisle and out into the sunlight. For a
moment they stood hand in hand upon the cathedral steps, clasping their
bundle and waiting for the next turn of fortune's wheel.

The bright sunlight of the summer day, shining on the open square,
almost blinded them, and what they saw in the square, when their eyes
had become used to it, did not comfort them. Everywhere there were
German soldiers with their terrible bayonets and pointed helmets and
their terrible songs. Everywhere there were pale and desperate Belgians
fleeing before the arrogant German invader.

"Oh, Jan," whispered Marie clinging to him, "there are so many people!
How shall we ever find Mother? I didn't know there were so many people
in the whole world."

"It isn't likely that we'll find her by just standing here, anyway,"
answered Jan. "We've got to keep going till we get somewhere."

He slung the bundle on his shoulder and whistled to Fidel, who had gone
down the steps to bark at a homeless cat.

"Come along," he said to Marie. And once more the little pilgrims took
up their journey. At the first corner they paused, not knowing whether
to go to the right or to the left.

"Which way?" said Marie.

Jan stood still and looked first in one direction and then in the other.

"Here, gutter-snipes, what are you standing here for? Make way for your
betters!" said a gruff voice behind them, and, turning, the children
found themselves face to face with a German officer dressed in a
resplendent uniform and accompanied by a group of swaggering young
soldiers. Too frightened to move, the children only looked up at him
and did not stir.

"Get out of the way, I tell you!" roared the officer, turning purple
with rage; "Orderly!" One of the young men sprang forward. He seized
Jan by the arm and deftly kicked him into the gutter. Another at the
same moment laid his hands on Marie. But he reckoned without Fidel,
faithful Fidel, who knew no difference between German and Belgian, but
knew only that no cruel hand should touch his beloved Marie, while he
was there to defend her. With a fierce growl he sprang at the young
orderly and buried his teeth in his leg. Howling with pain, the orderly
dropped Marie, while another soldier drew his sword with an oath and
made a thrust at Fidel. Fortunately Fidel was too quick for him. He let
go his hold upon the leg of the orderly, tearing a large hole in his
uniform as he did so, and flung himself directly between the legs of
the other soldier who was lunging at him with the sword. The next
instant the surprised German found himself sprawling upon the sidewalk,
and saw Fidel, who had escaped without a scratch, dashing wildly up the
street after Jan and Marie. Beside himself with rage, the soldier drew
a revolver and fired a shot, which barely missed Fidel, and buried
itself in the doorstep of the house past which he was running.

If Jan and Marie had not turned a corner just at that moment, and if
Fidel had not followed them, there is no telling what might have
happened next, for the young soldier was very angry indeed. Perhaps he
considered it beneath his dignity to run after them, and perhaps he saw
that Jan and Marie could both run like the wind and he would not be
likely to catch them if he did. At any rate, he did not follow. He
picked himself up and dusted his clothes, using very bad language as he
did so, and followed the officer and his companions up the street.

Meanwhile the tired children ran on and on, fear lending speed to their
weary legs. Round behind the great cathedral they sped, hoping to find
some way of escape from the terrors of the town, but their way was
blocked by the smoking ruins of a section of the city which the Germans
had burned in the night, and there was no way to get out in that
direction. Terrified and faint with hunger, they turned once more, and,
not knowing where they were going, stumbled at last upon the street
which led to the Antwerp gate.

"I remember this place;" cried Jan, with something like joy in his
voice. "Don't you remember, Marie? It's where we stood to watch the
soldiers, and Mother sang for us to march, because we were so tired and
hungry."

"I'm tired and hungry now, too," said poor Marie.

"Let's march again," said Jan.

"Where to?" said Marie.

"That's the way Father went when he marched away with the soldiers,"
said Jan, pointing to the Antwerp gate. "Anything is better than
staying here. Let's go that way." He started bravely forward once more,
Marie and Fidel following.

They found themselves only two wretched atoms in one of the saddest
processions in history, for there were many other people, as unhappy as
themselves, who were also trying to escape from the city. Some had
lived in the section which was now burning; others had been turned out
of their homes by the Germans; and all were hastening along, carrying
babies and bundles, and followed by groups of older children.

Jan and Marie were swept along with the hurrying crowd, through the
city gate and beyond, along the river road which led to Antwerp. No one
spoke to them. Doubtless they were supposed to belong to some one of
the fleeing families, and it was at least comforting to the children to
be near people of whom they were not afraid. But Jan and Marie could
not keep pace with the swift-moving crowd of refugees. They trudged
along the highway at their best speed, only to find themselves
straggling farther and farther behind.

They were half a mile or more beyond the city gate when they overtook a
queer little old woman who was plodding steadily along wheeling a
wheelbarrow, in front of her. She evidently did not belong among the
refugees, for she was making no effort to keep up with them. She had
bright, twinkling black eyes, and snow-white hair tucked under a
snow-white cap. Her face was as brown as a nut and full of wrinkles,
but it shone with such kindness and good-will that, when Jan and Marie
had taken one look at her, they could not help walking along by her
side.

"Maybe she has seen Mother," whispered Marie to Jan. "Let's ask her!"

The little old woman smiled down at them as they joined her. "You'll
have to hurry, my dears, or you won't keep up with your folks," she
said kindly.

"They aren't our folks," said Jan.

"They aren't?" said the little old woman, stopping short. "Then where
are your folks?"

"We haven't any, not just now," said Jan. "You see our father is a
soldier, and our mother, oh, have you seen our mother? She's lost!"

The little old woman gave them a quick, pitying glance. "Lost, is she?"
she said. "Well, now, I can't just be sure whether I've seen her or
not, not knowing what she looks like, but I wouldn't say I haven't.
Lots of folks have passed this way. How did she get lost?" She sat down
on the edge of the barrow and drew the children to her side. "Come,
now," she said, "tell Granny all about it! I've seen more trouble than
any one you ever saw in all your life before, and I'm not a mite afraid
of it either."

Comforted already, the children poured forth their story.

"You poor little lambs!" she cried, when they had finished, "and you
haven't had a bite to eat since yesterday! Mercy on us! You can never
find your mother on an empty stomach!" She rose from the wheelbarrow,
as she spoke, and trundled it swiftly from the road to the bank of the
river, a short distance away. Here, in a sheltered nook, hidden from
the highway by a group of willows, she stopped. "We'll camp right here,
and I'll get you a dinner fit for a king or a duke, at the very least,"
she said cheerily. "Look what I have in my wheelbarrow!" She took a
basket from the top of it as she spoke.

Fidel was already looking in, with his tail standing straight out
behind, his ears pointed forward, and the hairs bristling on the back
of his neck. There, on some clean white sand in the bottom of the
wheelbarrow, wriggled a fine fat eel!

"Now I know why I didn't sell that eel," cried Granny. "There's always
a reason for everything, you see, my darlings."

She seized the eel with a firm, well-sanded hand as she spoke, and
before could spell your name backwards, she had skinned and dressed it,
and had given the remnants to poor hungry Fidel. "Now, my boy," she
said gayly to Jan as she worked, "you get together some twigs and dead
leaves, and you, Big Eyes," she added to Marie, "find some stones by
the river, and we'll soon have such a stove as you never saw before,
and a fire in it, and a bit of fried eel, to fill your hungry stomachs."

Immensely cheered, the children flew on these errands. Then Marie had a
bright thought. "We have some potatoes in our bundle," she said.

"Well, now," cried the little old woman, "wouldn't you think they had
just followed up that eel on purpose? We'll put them to roast in the
ashes. I always carry a pan and a bit of fat and some matches about
with me when I take my eels to market," she explained as she whisked
these things out of the basket, "and it often happens that I cook
myself a bite to eat on my way home, especially if I'm late. You see, I
live a long way from here, just across the river from Boom, and I'm
getting lazy in my old age. Early every morning I walk to Malines with
my barrow full of fine eels, and sell them to the people of the town.
That's how I happen to be so rich!"

"Are you rich?" asked Marie wonderingly.

She had brought the stones from the river, and now she untied her
bundle and took out the potatoes. Jan had already heaped a little mound
of sticks and twigs near by, and soon the potatoes were cooking in the
ashes, and a most appetizing smell of frying eel filled the air.

"Am I rich?" repeated the old woman. She looked surprised that any one
could ask such a question. "Of course I'm rich. Haven't I got two eyes
in my head, and a tongue, too, and it's lucky, indeed, that it's that
way about, for if I had but one eye and two tongues, you see for
yourself how much less handy that would be! And I've two legs as good
as any one's, and two hands to help myself with! The Kaiser himself has
no more legs and arms than I, and I doubt if he can use them half as
well. Neither has he a stomach the more! And as for his heart" she
looked cautiously around as she spoke "his heart, I'll be bound, is not
half so good as mine! If it were, he could not find it in it to do all
the cruel things he's doing here. I'm sure of that."

For a moment the cheerfulness of her face clouded over; but she saw the
shadow reflected in the faces of Jan and Marie, and at once spoke more
gayly. "Bless you, yes, I'm rich," she went on; "and so are you! You've
got all the things that I have and more, too, for you legs and arms are
young, and you have a mother to look for. Not every one has that, you
may depend! And one of these days you'll find her. Make no doubt of
that."

"If we don't, she'll surely find us, anyway," said Jan. "She said she
would!"

"Indeed and she will," said the old woman. "Even the Germans couldn't
stop her; so what matter is it, if you both have to look a bit first?
It will only make it the better when you find each other again."

When the potatoes were done, the little old woman raked them out of the
ashes with a stick, broke them open, sprinkled a bit of salt on them
from the wonderful basket, and then handed one to each of the children,
wrapped in a plantain leaf, so they should not burn their fingers. A
piece of the eel was served to them in the same way, and Granny beamed
with satisfaction as she watched her famished guests.

"Aren't you going to eat, too?" asked Marie with her mouth full.

"Bless you, yes," said Granny. "Every chance I get. You just watch me!"
She made a great show of taking a piece of the eel as she spoke, but if
any one had been watching carefully, they would have her slyly put it
back again into the pan, and the children never knew that they ate her
share and their own, too.

When they had eaten every scrap of the eel, and Fidel had finished the
bones, the little old woman rose briskly from the bank, washed her pan
in the river, packed it in her basket again, and led the way up the
path to the highway once more. Although they found the road still
filled with the flying refugees, the world had grown suddenly brighter
to Jan and Marie. They had found a friend and they were fed.

"Now, you come along home with your Granny," said the little old woman
as they reached the Antwerp road and turned northward, "for I live in a
little house by the river right on the way to wherever you want to go!"



IX

OFF FOR ANTWERP

For several days the children stayed with the little old woman in her
tiny cottage on the edge of the river. Each morning they crossed the
bridge and stationed themselves by the Antwerp road to watch the swarm
of sad-faced Belgians as they hurried through Boom on their way to the
frontier and to safety in Holland. Each day they hoped that before the
sun went down they should see their mother among the hurrying
multitudes, but each day brought a fresh disappointment, and each night
the little old woman comforted them with fresh hope for the morrow.

"You see, my darlings," said she, "it may take a long time and you may
have to go a long way first, but I feel in my bones that you will find
her at last. And of course, if you do, every step you take is a step
toward her, no matter how far round you go."

Jan and Marie believed every word that Granny said. How could they help
it when she had been so good to them! Her courage and faith seemed to
make an isle of safety about her where the children rested in perfect
trust. They saw that neither guns nor Germans nor any other terror
could frighten Granny. In the midst of a thousand alarms she calmly
went her accustomed way, and every one who met her was the better for a
glimpse of the brave little brown face under its snowy cap. Early each
morning she rose with the larks, covered the bottom of her barrow with
clean white sand, and placed in it the live eels which had been caught
for her and brought to the door by small boys who lived in the
neighborhood. Then, when she had wakened the Twins, and the three had
had their breakfast together, away she would trudge over the long,
dusty road to Malines, wheeling the barrow with its squirming freight
in front of her.

Jan and Marie helped her all they could. They washed the dishes and
swept the floor of the tiny cottage and made everything tidy and clean
before they went to take up their stand beside the Antwerp road. When
the shadows grew long in the afternoon, how glad they were to see the
sturdy little figure come trudging home again! Then they would run to
meet her, and Jan would take the wheelbarrow from her tired hands and
wheel it for her over the bridge to the little cottage under the willow
trees on the other side of the river.

Then Marie's work was to clean the barrow, while Jan pulled weeds in
the tiny garden back of the house, and Granny got supper ready.
Supper-time was the best of all, for every pleasant evening they ate at
a little table out of doors under the willow trees.

One evening, when supper had been cleared away, they sat there
together, with Fidel beside them, while Granny told a wonderful tale
about the King of the Eels who lived in a crystal palace at the bottom
of the river.

"You can't quite see the palace," she said, "because, when you look
right down into it, the water seems muddy. But sometimes, when it is
still, you can see the Upside-Down Country where the King of the Eels
lives. There the trees all grow with their heads down and the sky is
'way, 'way below the trees. You see the sky might as well be down as up
for the eels. They aren't like us, just obliged to crawl around on the
ground without ever being able to go up or down at all. The up-above
sky belongs to the birds and the down-below sky belongs to the fishes
and eels. And I am not sure but one is just as nice as the other."

Marie and Jan went to the river, and, getting down on their hands and
knees, looked into the water.

"We can't see a thing!" they cried to Granny.

"You aren't looking the right way," she answered. "Look across it
toward the sunset."

"Oh! Oh!" cried Marie, clasping her hands; "I see it! I see the
down-below sky, and it is all red and gold!"

"I told you so," replied Granny triumphantly. "Lots of folks can't see
a thing in the river but the mud, when, if you look at it the right
way, there is a whole lovely world in it. Now, the palace of the King
of the Eels is right over in that direction where the color is the
reddest. He is very fond of red, is the King of the Eels. His throne is
all made of rubies, and he makes the Queen tie red bows on the tails of
all the little eels."

Jan and Marie were still looking with all their eyes across the still
water toward the sunset and trying to see the crystal palace of the
eels, when suddenly from behind them there came a loud "Hee-haw,
hee-haw." They jumped, and Granny jumped, too, and they all looked
around to see where the sound came from. There, coming slowly toward
them along the tow-path on the river-bank, was an old brown mule. She
was pulling a low, green river-boat by a towline, and a small boy, not
much bigger than Jan, was driving her. On the deck of the boat there
was a little cabin with white curtains in the tiny windows and two red
geraniums in pots standing on the sills. From a clothesline hitched to
the rigging there fluttered a row of little shirts, and seated on a box
near by there was a fat, friendly looking woman with two small children
playing by her side. The father of the family was busy with the tiller.

"There come the De Smets, as sure as you live!" cried Granny, rising
from the wheelbarrow, where she had been sitting. "I certainly am glad
to see them." And she started at once down the river to meet the boat,
with Jan and Marie and Fidel all following.

"Ship ahoy!" she cried gayly as the boat drew near. The boy who was
driving the mule grinned shyly. The woman on deck lifted her eyes from
her sewing, smiled, and waved her hand at Granny, while the two little
children ran to the edge of the boat; and held out their arms to her.

"Here we are again, war or no war!" cried Mother De Smet, as the boat
came alongside. Father De Smet left the tiller and threw a rope ashore.
"Whoa!" cried the boy driving the mule. The mule stopped with the
greatest willingness, the boy caught the rope and lifted the great loop
over a strong post on the river-bank, and the "Old Woman" for that was
the name of the boat was in port.

Soon a gangplank was slipped from the boat to the little wooden steps
on the bank, and Mother De Smet, with a squirming baby under each arm,
came ashore. "I do like to get out on dry land and shake my legs a bit
now and then," she said cheerfully as she greeted Granny. "On the boat
I just sit still and grow fat!"

"I shake my legs for a matter of ten miles every day," laughed Granny.
"That's how I keep my figure!"

Mother De Smet set the babies down on the grass, where they immediately
began to tumble about like a pair of puppies, and she and Granny talked
together, while the Twins went to watch the work of Father De Smet and
the boy, whose name was Joseph.

"I don't know whatever the country is coming to," said Mother De Smet
to Granny. "The Germans are everywhere, and they are taking everything
that they can lay their hands on. I doubt if we ever get our cargo safe
to Antwerp this time. We've come for a load of potatoes, but I am very
much afraid it is going to be our last trip for some time. The country
looks quiet enough as you see it from the boat, but the things that are
happening in it would chill your blood."

"Yes," sighed Granny; "if I would let it, my old heart would break over
the sights that I see every day on my way to Malines. But a broken
heart won't get you anywhere. Maybe a stout heart will."

"Who are the children you have with you?" asked Mother De Smet.

Then Granny told her how she had found Jan and Marie, and all the rest
of the sad story. Mother De Smet wiped her eyes and blew her nose very
hard as she listened.

"I wouldn't let them wait any longer by the Antwerp road, anyway," she
said when Granny had finished. "There is no use in the world in looking
for their mother to come that way. She was probably driven over the
border long ago. You just leave them with me to-morrow while you go to
town. 'Twill cheer them up a bit to play with Joseph and the babies."

"Well, now," said Granny, "if that isn't just like your good heart!"

And that is how it happened that, when she trudged off with her barrow
the next morning, the Twins ran down to the boat and spent the day
rolling on the grass with the babies, and helping Father De Smet and
Joseph to load the boat with bags of potatoes which had been brought to
the dock in the night by neighboring farmers.

When Granny came trundling her barrow home in the late afternoon, she
found the children and their new friends already on the best of terms;
and that night, after the Twins were in bed, she went aboard the "Old
Woman" and talked for a long time with Father and Mother De Smet. No
one will ever know just what they said to each other, but it must be
that they talked about the Twins, for when the children awoke the next
morning, they found Granny standing beside their bed with their clothes
all nicely washed and ironed in her hands.

"I'm not going to town this morning with my eels," she said as she
popped them out of bed. "I'm going to stay at home and see you off on
your journey!" She did not tell them that things had grown so terrible
in Malines that even she felt it wise to stay away.

"Our journey!" cried the Twins in astonishment. "What journey?"

"To Antwerp," cried Granny. "Now, you never thought a chance like that
would come to you, I'm sure, but some people are born lucky! You see
the De Smets start back today, and they are willing to take you along
with them!"

"But we don't want to leave you, dear, dear Granny!" cried the Twins,
throwing their arms about her neck.

"And I don't want you to go, either, my lambs," said Granny; "but, you
see, there are lots of things to think of. In the first place, of
course you want to go on hunting for your mother. It may be she has
gone over the border; for the Germans are already in trenches near
Antwerp, and our army is nearer still to Antwerp and in trenches, too.
There they stay, Father De Smet says, for all the world, like two
tigers, lying ready to spring at each other's throats. He says Antwerp
is so strongly fortified that the Germans can never take it, and so it
is a better place to be in than here. The De Smets will see that you
are left in safe hands, and I'm sure your mother would want you to go."
The children considered this for a moment in silence.

At last Jan said, "Do you think Father De Smet would let me help drive
the mule?"

"I haven't a doubt of it," said Granny.

"But what about Fidel, our dear Fidel?" cried Marie.

"I tell you what I'll do;" said Granny. "I'll take care of Fidel for
you! You shall leave him here with me until you come back again! You
see, I really need good company, and since I can't have you, I know you
would be glad to have Fidel stay here to protect me. Then you'll always
know just where he is."

She hurried the children into their clothes as she talked, gave them a
good breakfast, and before they had time to think much about what was
happening to them, they had said good-bye to Fidel, who had to be shut
in the cottage to keep him from following the boat, and were safely
aboard the "Old Woman" and slowly moving away down the river. They
stood in the stern of the boat, listening to Fidel's wild barks, and
waving their hands, until Granny's kind face was a mere round speck in
the distance.



X

ON THE TOW-PATH

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.



XI

THE ATTACK

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.



XII

THE ZEPPELIN RAID

When the Twins awoke, early the next morning, they found that Father
and Mother De Smet had been stirring much earlier still, and that the
"Old Woman" was already slipping quietly along among the docks of
Antwerp. To their immense surprise they were being towed, not by
Netteke, but by a very small and puffy steam tug. They were further
astonished to find that Netteke herself was on board the "Old Woman."

"How in the world did you get the mule on to the boat!" gasped Jan,
when he saw her.

"Led her right up the gangplank just like folks," answered Father De
Smet. "I couldn't leave her behind and I wanted to get to the Antwerp
docks as soon as possible. This was the quickest way. You see," he went
on, "I don't know where I shall be going next, but I know it won't be
up the Dyle, so I am going to keep Netteke right where I can use her
any minute."

There was no time for further questions, for Father De Smet had to
devote his attention to the tiller. Soon they were safely in dock and
Father De Smet was unloading his potatoes and selling them to the
market-men, who swarmed about the boats to buy the produce which had
been brought in from the country.

"There!" he said with a sigh of relief as he delivered the last of his
cargo to a purchaser late in the afternoon; "that load is safe from the
Germans, anyway."

"How did you find things up the Dyle?" asked the merchant who had
bought the potatoes.

Father De Smet shook his head.

"Couldn't well be worse," he said. "I'm not going to risk another trip.
The Germans are taking everything they can lay their hands on, and are
destroying what they can't seize. I nearly lost this load, and my life
into the bargain. If it hadn't been that, without knowing it, we
stopped so near the Belgian line of trenches that they could fire on
the German foragers who tried to take our cargo, I shouldn't have been
here to tell this tale."

"God only knows what will become of Belgium if this state of things
continues," groaned the merchant. "Food must come from somewhere or the
people will starve."

"True enough," answered Father De Smet. "I believe I'll try a trip
north through the back channels of the Scheldt and see what I can pick
up."

"Don't give up, anyway," urged the merchant. "If you fellows go back on
us, I don't know what we shall do. We depend on you to bring supplies
from somewhere, and if you can't get them in Belgium, you'll have to go
up into Holland."

Mother De Smet leaned over the boatrail and spoke to the two men who
were standing on the dock.

"You'd better believe we'll not give up," she said. "We don't know the
meaning of the word."

"Well," said the merchant sadly, "maybe you don't, but there are others
who do. It takes a stout heart to have faith that God hasn't forgotten
Belgium these days."

"It's easy enough to have faith when things are going right," said
Mother De Smet, "but to have faith when things are going wrong isn't so
easy." Then she remembered Granny. "But a sick heart won't get you
anywhere, and maybe a stout one will," she finished.

"That's a good word," said the merchant.

"It was said by as good a woman as treads shoe-leather," answered
Mother De Smet.

"You are safe while you stay in Antwerp, anyway," said the merchant as
he turned to say good-bye. "Our forts are the strongest in the world
and the Germans will never be able to take them. There's comfort in
that for us." Then he spoke to his horses and turned away with his load.

"Let us stay right here to-night," said Mother De Smet to her husband
as he came on board the boat. "We are all in need of rest after
yesterday, and in Antwerp we can get a good night's sleep. Besides, it
is so late in the day that we couldn't get out of town before dark if
we tried."

Following this plan, the whole family went to bed at dusk, but they
were not destined to enjoy the quiet sleep they longed for. The night
was warm, and the cabin small, so Father De Smet and Joseph, as well as
the Twins, spread bedding on the deck and went to sleep looking up at
the stars.

They had slept for some hours when they were suddenly aroused by the
sound of a terrific explosion. Instantly they sprang to their feet,
wide awake, and Mother De Smet came rushing from the cabin with the
babies screaming in her arms.

"What is it now? What is it?" she cried.

"Look! Look!" cried Jan.

He pointed to the sky. There, blazing with light, like a great
misshapen moon, was a giant airship moving swiftly over the city. As it
sailed along, streams of fire fell from it, and immediately there
followed the terrible thunder of bursting bombs. When it passed out of
sight, it seemed as if the voice of the city itself must rise in
anguish at the terrible destruction left in its wake.

Just what that destruction was, Father De Smet did not wish to see.
"This is a good place to get away from," he said to the frightened
group cowering on the deck of the "Old Woman" after the bright terror
had disappeared. When morning came he lost no time in making the best
speed he could away from the doomed city of Antwerp which they had
thought so safe.

When they had left the city behind them and the boat was slowly making
its way through the quiet back channels of the Scheldt the world once
more seemed really peaceful to the wandering children. Their way lay
over still waters and beside green pastures, and as they had no
communication with the stricken regions of Belgium, they had no news of
the progress of the war, until, some days later, the boat docked at
Rotterdam, and it became necessary to decide what should be done next.
There they learned that they had barely escaped the siege of Antwerp,
which had begun with the Zeppelin raid.

Father De Smet was now obliged to confront the problem of what to do
with his own family, for, since Antwerp was now in the hands of the
enemy, he could no longer earn his living in the old way. Under these
changed conditions he could not take care of Jan and Marie, so one sad
day they said good-bye to good Mother De Smet, to Joseph and the
babies, and went with Father De Smet into the city of Rotterdam.

They found that these streets were also full of Belgian refugees, and
here, too, they watched for their mother. In order to keep up her
courage, Marie had often to feel of the locket and to say to herself:
"She will find us. She will find us." And Jan, Jan had many times to
say to himself, "I am now a man and must be brave," or he would have
cried in despair.

But help was nearer than they supposed. Already England had begun to
organize for the relief of the Belgian refugees, and it was in the
office of the British Consul at Rotterdam that Father De Smet finally
took leave of Jan and Marie. The Consul took them that night to his own
home, and, after a careful record had been made of their names and
their parents' names and all the facts about them, they were next day
placed upon a ship, in company with many other homeless Belgians, and
sent across the North Sea to England.



XIII

REFUGEES

If I were to tell you all the strange new sights that Jan and Marie
saw, and all the things they did in England, it would make this book so
big you could not hold it up to read it, so I must skip all about the
great house in the southern part of England where they next found
themselves. This house was the great country place of a very rich man,
and when the war broke out he had given it to be used as a shelter for
homeless Belgians. There were the most wonderful woods and parks on the
estate, and miles of beautiful drives. There were great gardens and
stables and hothouses; and the house was much bigger and finer than any
Jan and Marie had ever seen in all their lives. It seemed to them as if
they had suddenly been changed into a prince and princess by some fairy
wand. They were not alone in all this splendor; other lost little
Belgian children were there, and there were lost parents, too, and it
seemed such a pity that the lost parents and the lost children should
not be the very ones that belonged together, so that every one could be
happy once more. However, bad as it was, it was so much better than
anything they had known since the dreadful first night of the alarm
that Jan and Marie became almost happy again.

At night they and the other homeless children slept in little white
cots set all in a row in a great picture gallery. They were given new
clothes, for by this time even their best ones were quite worn out, and
every day they had plenty of good plain food to eat. Every day more
Belgians came, and still more, until not only the big house, but the
stable and outbuildings were all running-over full of homeless people.
One day, after they had been in this place for two or three weeks, Jan
and Marie were called into the room where sat the sweet-faced lady
whose home they were in. It was like an office, and there were several
other persons there with her.

The sweet-faced lady spoke to them. "Jan and Marie," she said, "how
would you like to go to live with a dear lady in America who would love
you, and take care of you, so you need never be lonely and sad again?"

"But our mother!" gasped Marie, bursting into tears. "We have not found
her!"

"You will not lose her any more by going to America," said the lady,
"for, you see, we shall know all about you here, and if your mother
comes, we shall be able to tell her just where to find you. Meanwhile
you will be safe and well cared for, far away from all the dreadful
things that are happening here."

"It is so far away!" sobbed Marie.

Jan said nothing; he was busy swallowing lumps in his own throat.

"You see, dears," the lady said gently, "you can be together there, for
this woman has no children of her own, and is willing to take both of
you. That does not often happen, and, besides, she is a Belgian; I know
you will find a good home with her."

"You're sure we could be together?" asked Jan.

"Yes," said the lady.

"Because," said Jan, "Mother said I must take care of Marie."

"And she said she'd find us again if she had to swim the sea," said
Marie, feeling of her locket and smiling through her tears.

"She won't have to swim," said the lady. "We will see to that! If she
comes here, she shall go for you in a fine big ship, and so that's all
settled." She kissed their woebegone little faces. "You are going to
start to-morrow," she said. "The good captain of the ship has promised
to take care of you, so you will not be afraid, and I know you will be
good children."

It seemed like a month to Jan and Marie, but it was really only seven
days later that they stood on the deck of the good ship Caspian, as it
steamed proudly into the wonderful harbor of New York. It was dusk, and
already the lights of the city sparkled like a sky full of stars
dropped down to earth. High above the other stars shone the great torch
of "Liberty enlightening the World." "Oh," gasped Marie, as she gazed,
"New York must be as big as heaven. Do you suppose that is an angel
holding a candle to light us in?"

Just then the captain came to find them, and a few minutes later they
walked with him down the gangplank, right into a pair of outstretched
arms. The arms belonged to Madame Dujardin, their new mother. "I should
have known them the moment I looked at them, even if they hadn't been
with the captain," she cried to her husband, who stood smiling by her
side. "Poor darlings, your troubles are all over now! Just as soon as
Captain Nichols says you may, you shall come with us, and oh, I have so
many things to show you in your new home!"

She drew them with her to a quieter part of the dock, while her husband
talked with the captain, and then, when they had bidden him good-bye,
they were bundled into a waiting motor car and whirled away through
miles of brilliantly lighted streets and over a wonderful bridge, and
on and on, until they came to green lawns, and houses set among trees
and shrubs, and it seemed to the children as if they must have reached
the very end of the world. At last the car stopped before a house
standing some distance back from the street in a large yard, and the
children followed their new friends through the bright doorway of their
house.

Madame Dujardin helped them take off their things in the pleasant
hallway, where an open fire was burning, and later, when they were
washed and ready, she led the way to a cheerful dining room, where
there was a pretty table set for four. There were flowers on the table,
and they had chicken for supper, and, after that, ice cream! Jan and
Marie had never tasted ice cream before in their whole lives! They
thought they should like America very much.

After supper their new mother took them upstairs and showed them two
little rooms with a bathroom between. One room was all pink and white
with a dear little white bed in it, and she said to Marie, "This is
your room, my dear." The other room was all in blue and white with
another dear little white bed in it, and she said to Jan, "This is your
room, my dear." And there were clean white night-gowns on the beds, and
little wrappers with gay flowered slippers, just waiting for Jan and
Marie to put them on.

"Oh, I believe it is heaven!" cried Marie, as she looked about the
pretty room. Then she touched Madame Dujardin's sleeve timidly. "Is it
all true?" she said. "Shan't we wake up and have to go somewhere else
pretty soon?"

"No, dear," said Madame Dujardin gently. "You are going to stay right
here now and be happy."

"It will be a very nice place for Mother to find us in," said Jan. "She
will come pretty soon now, I should think."

"I hope she may," said Madame Dujardin, tears twinkling in her eyes.

"I'm sure she will," said Marie. "You see everybody is looking for her.
There's Granny, and Mother and Father De Smet, and Joseph, and the
people in Rotterdam, and the people in England, too; and then, besides,
Mother is looking for herself, of course!"

"She said she would surely find us even if she had to swim the sea,"
added Jan.



XIV

THE MOST WONDERFUL PART

And now comes the most wonderful part of the story!

Madame Dujardin prepared a bath and said to Marie: "You may have the
first turn in the tub because you're a girl. In America the girls have
the best of everything", she laughed at Jan, as she spoke. "I will help
you undress. Jan, you may get ready and wait for your turn in your own
room." She unbuttoned Marie's dress, slipped off her clothes, and held
up the gay little wrapper for her to put her arms into, and just then
she noticed the locket on her neck. "We'll take this off, too," she
said, beginning to unclasp it.

But Marie clung to it with both hands. "No, no," she cried. "Mother
said I was never, never to take it off. It has her picture in it."

"May I see it, dear?" asked Madame Dujardin. "I should like to know
what your mother looks like." Marie nestled close to her, and Madame
Dujardin opened the locket.

For a moment she gazed at the picture in complete silence, her eyes
staring at it like two blue lights. Then she burst into a wild fit of
weeping, and cried out, "Leonie! Leonie! It is not possible! My own
sister's children!" She clasped the bewildered Marie in her arms and
kissed her over and over again. She ran to the door and brought in Jan
and kissed him; and then she called her husband. When he came in and
saw her with her arms around both children at once, holding the locket
in her hands, and laughing and crying both together, he, too, was
bewildered.

"What in the world is the matter, Julie?" he cried.

For answer, she pointed to the face in the locket. "Leonie! Leonie!"
she cried. "They are my own sister's children! Surely the hand of God
is in this!"

Her husband looked at the locket. "So it is! So it is!" he said in
astonishment. "I thought at first you had gone crazy."

"See!" cried his wife. "It's her wedding-gown, and afterward she gave
me those very beads she has around her neck! I have them yet!" She
rushed from the room and returned in a moment with the beads in her
hand.

Meanwhile Jan and Marie had stood still, too astonished to do more than
stare from one amazed and excited face to the other, as their new
father and mother gazed, first at them, and then at the locket, and
last at the beads, scarcely daring to believe the testimony of their
own eyes. "To think," cried Madame Dujardin at last, "that I should not
have known! But there are many Van Hoves in Belgium, and it never
occurred to me that they could be my own flesh and blood. It is years
since I have heard from Leonie. In fact, I hardly knew she had any
children, our lives have been so different. Oh, it is all my fault,"
she cried, weeping again. "But if I have neglected her, I will make it
up to her children! It may be, oh, it is just possible that she is
still alive, and that she may yet write to me after all these years!
Sorrow sometimes bridges wide streams!"

Then she turned more quietly to the children.

"You see, dears," she said, "I left Belgium many years ago, and came
with your uncle to this country. We were poor when we came, but your
uncle has prospered as one can in America. At first Leonie and I wrote
regularly to each other. Then she grew more and more busy, and we
seemed to have no ties in common, so that at last we lost sight of each
other altogether." She opened her arms to Marie and Jan as she spoke,
and held them for some time in a close embrace.

Finally she lifted her head and laughed. "This will never do!" she
exclaimed. "You must have your baths, even if you are my own dear niece
and nephew. The water must be perfectly cold by this time!"

She went into the bathroom, turned on more hot water, and popped Marie
into the tub. In half an hour both children had said their prayers and
were tucked away for the night in their clean white beds.

Wonderful days followed for Jan and Marie. They began to go to school;
they had pretty clothes and many toys, and began to make friends among
the little American children of the neighborhood. But in the midst of
these new joys they did not forget their mother, still looking for
them, or their father, now fighting, as they supposed, in the cruel
trenches of Belgium. But at last there came a day when Aunt Julie
received a letter with a foreign postmark. She opened it, with
trembling fingers, and when she saw that it began, "My dear Sister
Julie," she wept so for joy that she could not see to read it, and her
husband had to read it for her.

This was the letter:

        You will perhaps wonder at hearing from me after the long
        years of silence that have passed, but I have never
        doubted the goodness of your heart, my Julie, nor your
        love for your poor Leonie, even though our paths in life
        have led such different ways. And now I must tell you of
        the sorrows which have broken my heart. Georges was
        obliged to go into the army at a moment's notice when the
        war broke out. A few days later the Germans swept through
        Meer, driving the people before them like chaff before
        the wind. As our house was on the edge of the village, I
        was the first to see them coming. I hid the children in
        the vegetable cellar, but before I could get to a hiding-place
        for myself, they swept over the town, driving every
        man, woman, and child before them. To turn back then was
        impossible, and it was only after weeks of hardship and
        danger that I at last succeeded in struggling through the
        territory occupied by Germans to the empty city of
        Malines, and the deserted village where we had been so
        happy! On the kitchen door of our home I found a paper
        pinned. On it was printed, "Dear Mother--We have gone to
        Malines to find you--Jan and Marie." Since then I have
        searched every place where there seemed any possibility
        of my finding my dear children, but no trace of them can
        I find. Then, through friends in Antwerp, I learned that
        Georges had been wounded and was in a hospital there and
        I went at once to find him. He had lost an arm in the
        fighting before Antwerp and was removed to Holland after
        the siege began. Here we have remained since, still
        hoping God would hear our prayers and give us news of our
        dear children. It would even be a comfort to know surely
        of their death, and if I could know that they were alive
        and well, I think I should die of joy. Georges can fight
        no more; our home is lost; we are beggars until this war
        is over and our country once more restored to us. I am
        now at work in a factory, earning what keeps body and
        soul together. Georges must soon leave the hospital,
        then, God knows what may befall us. How I wish we had
        been wise like you, my Julie, and your Paul, and that we
        had gone, with you to America years ago! I might then
        have my children with me in comfort. If you get this
        letter, write to your heart-broken

LEONIE.

It was not a letter that went back that very day; it was a cablegram,
and it said:

        Jan and Marie are safe with me. Am sending money with
        this to the Bank of Holland, for your passage to America.
        Come at once.                 JULIE.

People do not die of joy, or I am sure that Father and Mother Van Hove
would never have survived the reading of that message. Instead it put
such new strength and energy into their weary souls and bodies that two
days later they were on their way to England, and a week later still
they stood on the deck of the Arabia as it steamed into New York
Harbor. Jan and Marie with Uncle Paul and Aunt Julie met them at the
dock, and there are very few meetings, this side of heaven, like the
reunion of those six persons on that day.

The story of that first evening together can hardly be told. First.
Father and Mother Van Hove listened to Jan and Marie as they told of
their wanderings with Fidel, of the little old eel woman, of Father and
Mother De Smet, of the attack by Germans and of the friends they found
in Holland and in England; and when everybody had cried a good deal
about that, Father Van Hove told what had happened to him; then Mother
Van Hove told of her long and perilous search for her children; and
there were more tears of thankfulness and joy, until it seemed as if
their hearts were filled to the brim and running over. But when, last
of all, Uncle Paul told of the plans which he and Aunt Julie had made
for the family, they found there was room in their hearts for still
more joy.

"I have a farm in the country," said Uncle Paul. "It is not very far
from New York. There is a good house on it; it is already stocked. I
need a farmer to take care of the place for me, and trustworthy help is
hard to get here. If you will manage it for me, Brother Georges, I
shall have no further anxiety about it, and shall expect to enjoy the
fruits of it as I have never yet been able to do. Leonie shall make
some of her good butter for our city table, and the children" here he
pinched Marie's cheek, now round and rosy once more "the children shall
pick berries and help on the farm all summer. In winter they can come
back to Uncle Paul and Aunt Julie and go to school here, for they are
our children now, as well as yours."

Father Van Hove rose, stretched out his one hand, and, grasping Uncle
Paul's, tried to thank him, but his voice failed.

"Don't say a word, old man," said Uncle Paul, clasping Father Van
Hove's hand with both of his. "All the world owes a debt to Belgium
which it can never pay. Her courage and devotion have saved the rest of
us from the miseries she has borne so bravely. If you got your just
deserts, you'd get much more than I can ever give you."

In the end it all came about just as Uncle Paul had said, and the Van
Hoves are living in comfort and happiness on that farm this very day.


THE END




SUGGESTIONS TO TEACHERS

American children who have been giving their pennies to help take care
of little Belgian children will find this new "Twins" book one of the
most appealing that Mrs. Perkins has ever written. The author's Preface
states the sources of her inspiration. As usual, her story will be
found sympathetic in spirit and accurate as to facts.

At the present day books are constantly issuing from the press which
will assist teachers in planning their own preparation for the class
reading of this book; for example, Griffis's: "Belgium: The Land of
Art" and Gibson's: "A Journal from our Legation in Belgium". Books
issued in past years which tell other stories of exile or emigration,
or which deal with European countries neighboring Belgium, also have
their place in the teacher's reading. We may suggest Griffis's: "The
Pilgrims in Their Three Homes" and "Brave Little Holland", and Davis's
"History of Medieval and Modern Europe" (sections 238, 266, and the
account of the present war). A file of the National Geographic
Magazine, accessible in most public libraries, will be found to contain
many articles and illustrations which will be invaluable in this
connection. Picture postcards, also, will supply a wealth of
appropriate subjects. Children should be encouraged to bring material
of this sort to school.

Once the historical and geographical background has been sketched, the
teacher may safely trust the children to get the most out of the story.
Fifth grade pupils can read it without preparation. Pupils in the
fourth grade should first read it in a study period in order to work
out the pronunciation of the more difficult words.

The possibilities for dramatization will be immediately apparent. In
this, the author's illustrations will, as in all the "Twins" books,
furnish hints as to scenes and action. They may likewise be used as the
subjects of both oral and written compositions--each pupil selecting
the picture most interesting to him, and retelling its story in his own
words.

The illustrations may be used, also, as models for the pupils'
sketching; their simple style renders them especially suitable for this
use.









End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Belgian Twins, by Lucy Fitch Perkins

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