<p><SPAN name="chap19"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER XIX <br/> AT THE QUAY </h3>
<p>Five o'clock at the quay, and already the
new day was being made raucous by the
bustle of departure—shouts of porters, tenders'
jangling engine bells, thump of trunks dropped
down skidways, lamentations of voyagers vainly
hunting baggage mislaid. Out in the stream
the <i>Saxonia</i>—a clean white ship, veritable ark
of refuge for pious Americans escaping the
deluge.</p>
<p>In the midst of a group of his countrymen
Henry J. Sherman stood, feet wide apart and
straw hat cocked back over his bald spot. He
was narrating the breathless incidents of the
night's dark hour:</p>
<p>"Yes, sir, a soldier comes to our rooms about
three-thirty o'clock and hammers on our door.
'Everybody in this hotel's under arrest,' he
says. 'Kindly dress as soon as possible and
report to Major Bishop in the office.' And we
not five hours before the guests of General and
Lady Crandall at Government House. What
d'you think of that for a quick change?</p>
<p>"Well, gentlemen, we piled down-stairs—with
me minus a collar button and havin' to hold
my collar down behind with my hand. And
what do we find? This chap Almer, with a
face like a side of cream cheese, standing in the
middle of a bunch of soldiers with guns;
another bunch of soldiers surroundin' his Arab
boy, who's as innocent a little fellah as ever you
set eyes on; and this Major Bishop walkin' up
and down, all excited, and sayin' something
about somebody's got a scheme to blow up the
whole fleet out there. Which might have been
done, he says, if it wasn't for that fellah
Woodhouse we'd had dinner with just that very
evening."</p>
<p>"Who's some sort of a spy. I knew it all
the time, you see." Mrs. Sherman was quick
to claim her share of her fellow tourists'
attention. "Only he's a British spy set to watch
the Germans. Major Bishop told me that in
confidence after it was all over—said he'd never
met a man with the nerve this Captain
Woodhouse has."</p>
<p>"Better whisper that word 'spy' soft,"
Henry J. admonished sotto voce. "We're
not out of this plagued Europe yet, and
we've had about all the excitement we can
stand; don't want anybody to arrest us again
just the minute we're sailin'. But, as I was
sayin', there we all stood, foolish as goats,
until in comes General Crandall, followed by
this Woodhouse chap. 'Excuse me, people, for
causing you this little inconvenience,' the
general says. 'Major Bishop has taken his orders
too literal. If you'll go back to your rooms and
finish dressin' I'll have the army bus down
here to take you to the quay. The Hotel
Splendide's accommodations have been slightly
disarranged by the arrest of its worthy
proprietor.' So back we go, and—by cricky,
mother, here comes the general and Mrs. Crandall now!"</p>
<p>Henry J. broke through the ring of passengers,
and with a waving of his hat, rushed to
the curb. A limousine bearing the governor,
his lady and Jane Gerson, and with two bulky
hampers strapped to the baggage rack behind,
was just drawing up.</p>
<p>"Why, of course we're down here to see you
off—and bid you Godspeed to little old
Kewanee!" Lady Crandall was quick to anticipate
the Shermans' greetings. General Crandall,
beaming indulgently on the group of
homegoers, had a hand for each.</p>
<p>"Yes—yes," he exclaimed. "After arresting
you at three o'clock we're here to give you a
clean ticket at five. Couldn't do more than
that—what? Regrettable occurrence and all that,
but give you something to tell the stay-at-homes
about when you get back to—ah——"</p>
<p>"Kewanee, Illynoy, General," Sherman was
quick to supply. "No town like it this side the
pearly gates."</p>
<p>"No doubt of it, Sherman," Crandall heartily
agreed. "A quiet place, I'll wager. Think I'd
relish a touch of your Kewanee after—ah—life
on Gibraltar."</p>
<p>Jane Gerson, who had been standing in the
car, anxiously scanning the milling crowd about
the landing stage, caught sight of a white
helmet and khaki-clad shoulders pushing through
the nearer fringes of travelers. She slipped
out of the limousine unseen, and waited for the
white helmet to be doffed before her.</p>
<p>"I was afraid maybe——" the girl began,
her cheeks suddenly flaming.</p>
<p>"Afraid that, after all, it wasn't true?" the
man she had found in war's vortex finished,
his gray eyes compelling hers to tell him their
whole message. "Afraid that Captain Cavendish
might be as vile a deceiver as Woodhouse?
Does Cavendish have to prove himself all over
again, little girl?"</p>
<p>"No—no!" Her hands fluttered into his, and
her lips were parted in a smile. "It's Captain
Woodhouse I want to know—always; the man
whose pledged word I held to."</p>
<p>"It must have been—hard," he murmured.
"But you were splendid—splendid!"</p>
<p>"No, I was not." Tears came to dim her
eyes, and the hands he held trembled.
"Once—in one terrible moment this morning—when
Jaimihr told us you were going to the signal
tower—when we waited—waited to hear that
awful noise, my faith failed me. I thought
you——"</p>
<p>"Forget that moment, Jane, dearest. A saint
would have denied faith then."</p>
<p>They were silent for a minute, their hearts
quailing before the imminent separation. He
spoke:</p>
<p>"Go back to the States now; go back and
show this Hildebrand person you're a wonder—a
prize. Show him what I've known more
and more surely every moment since that meeting
in Calais. But give him fair warning; he's
going to lose you."</p>
<p>"Lose me?" she echoed.</p>
<p>"Inevitably. Listen, girl! In a year my
term of service is up, and if the war's over I
shall leave the army, come to the States to you,
and—and—do you think I could become a good
American?"</p>
<p>"If—if you have the proper teacher," the
girl answered, with a flash of mischief.</p>
<p>"All aboard for the <i>Saxonia</i>!" It was Consul
Reynolds, fussed, perspiring, overwhelmed
with the sense of his duty, who bustled up to
where the Shermans were chatting with Lady
Crandall and the general. Reynolds' sharp eye
caught an intimate tableau on the other side
of the auto. "And that means you, Miss
Step-lively New York," he shouted, "much as I hate
to—ah—interrupt."</p>
<p>Jane Gerson saw her two precious hampers
stemming a way through the crowd on the
backs of porters, bound for the tender's deck.
She could not let them out of her sight.</p>
<p>"Wait, Jane!" His hands were on her arms,
and he would not let her go. "Will you be my
teacher? I want no other."</p>
<p>"My terms are high." She tried to smile,
though trembling lips belied her.</p>
<p>"I'd pay with my life," he whispered in a
quick gust of passion. "Here's my promise——"</p>
<p>He took her in his arms, and between them
passed the world-old pledge of man and girl.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<p class="t3">
THE END</p>
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