Apparently some of the enemy had not yet withdrawn to the north, for in less than five seconds Roscoe was surrounded by a group of German soldiers, among whom towered a huge officer with an eye so fierce and piercing that it was apparent even in the half darkness. He sported a moustache more aggressively terrible than that of Kaiser Bill himself and his demeanor was such as to make that of a roaring lion seem like a docile lamb by comparison. An Iron Cross depended from a heavy chain about his bull neck and his portly breast was so covered with the junk of rank and commemoration that it seemed like one of those boards from which street hawkers sell badges at a public celebration. Poor Tom, who had been hauled out of the hole, stood dogged and sullen in the clutch of a Boche soldier, and Roscoe, even in his surprise at "I knew those branches were broken off," Tom muttered, as if in answer. "They're using them for camouflage. It's got nothing to do with the other thing about which way we were going." But Roscoe only looked at him with a sneer. Wherever the wrong and right lay as to their direction, they had run plunk into a machine-gun nest and Roscoe Bent, with all his diabolical skill of aim, could not afford his fine indulgence of sneering, for as an active combatant, which Tom was not, he should have known that these nests were more likely to be found at the wood's edge than anywhere else, where they could command the open country. The little spur of woods afforded, indeed, an ideal spot for secreting a machine gun, whence a clear range might be had both north and south. If Tom had not been a little afraid of Roscoe he would have acted on the good scout warning of the broken branches and made a detour in time to escape this dreadful plight. And the vain regret that he had not done so rankled in his breast now. The pit was completely surrounded "Vell, you go home, huh?" the officer demanded, with a grim touch of humor. Roscoe was about to answer, but Tom took the words out of his mouth. "We got lost and we got rattled," he said, with a frank confession which surprised Roscoe; "we thought we were headed south." The sniper bestowed another angrily contemptuous look upon him, but Tom appeared not to notice it. "Vell, we rattle you some more—vat?" the officer said, without very much meaning. His voice was enough to rattle any captive, but Tom was not easily disconcerted, and instead of cowering under this martial ferocity and the scorning looks of his friend, he glanced about him in his frowning, lowering way as if the surroundings interested him more than his captors. But he said nothing. "You English—no?" the officer demanded. "We're Americans," said Roscoe, regaining his self-possession. "Ach! Diss iss good for you. If you are "There's only the two of us," said Roscoe. Tom seemed willing enough to let his companion do the talking, and indeed Roscoe, now that he had recovered his poise, seemed altogether the fitter of the two to be the spokesman. "We got rattled, as this kid says." "If we'd followed that light we wouldn't have happened in on you. We hope we don't intrude," he added sarcastically. The officer glanced at the tiny light in the distance, then at one of the soldiers, then at another, then poured forth a gutteral torrent at them all. Then he peered suspiciously into the darkness. "For treachery, ve kill," he said. "I told you there are only two of us," said Roscoe simply. "Ach, two! Two millions, you mean! Vat? Ach!" he added, with a deprecating wave of his hands. "Vy not billions, huh?" Roscoe gathered that he was sneering skeptically about the number of Americans reported to be in France. "Ve know just how many," the officer added; "vell, vat you got, huh?" At this two of the Boches proceeded to search "Vat is diss, huh?" he said, looking at a small object in his hand. Tom's answer nearly knocked Roscoe off his feet. "It's a compass," said he. So Tom had had a compass with him all the time they had been discussing which was the right direction to take! Why he had not brought it out to prove the accuracy of his own contention Roscoe could not comprehend. "A compass, huh. Vy you not use it?" "Because I was sure I was right," said Tom. "Always sure you are right, you Yankees! Vat?" "Nothing," said Tom. The officer examined the trifling haul as well as he could in the darkness, then began talking in German to one of his men. And meanwhile Tom watched him in evident suspense, and Roscoe, unmollified, cast at Tom a look of sneering disgust for his bungling error—a look which seemed to include the whole brotherhood of scouts. Finally the officer turned upon Roscoe with his characteristic martial ferocity. "How long you in France?" he demanded. "Oh, about a year or so." "Vat ship you come on?" "I don't know the name of it." "You come to Havre, vat?" "I didn't notice the port." "Huh! You are not so—vide-avake, huh?" "Absent-minded, yes," said Roscoe. The officer paused, glaring at Roscoe, and Tom could not help envying his friend's easy and self-possessed air. "You know the Texas Pioneer?" the officer shot out in that short, imperious tone of demand which is the only way in which a German knows how to ask a question. "Never met him," said Roscoe. "A ship!" thundered the officer. "Oh, a ship. No, I've never been introduced." "She come to Havre—vat?" "That'll be nice," said Roscoe. "You never hear of dis ship, huh?" "No, there are so many, you know." "To bring billions, yes!" the officer said ironically. "That's the idea." Pause. "You hear about more doctors coming—no? Soon?" "Sorry I can't oblige you," said Roscoe. The officer paused a moment, glaring at him and Tom felt very unimportant and insignificant. "Vell, anyway, you haf good muscle, huh?" the officer finally observed; then, turning to his subordinates, he held forth in German until it appeared to Tom that he and Roscoe were to carry the machine gun to the enemy line. To Tom, under whose sullen, lowering manner, was a keenness of observation sometimes almost uncanny, it seemed that these men were not the regular crew which had been stationed here, but had themselves somehow chanced upon the deserted nest in the course of their withdrawal from the village. For one thing, it seemed to him that this imperious officer was a personage of high rank, who would not ordinarily have been stationed in one of these machine gun pits. And for another thing, there was something (he could not tell exactly what) about the general demeanor of their captors, their way of removing the gun and their When he lifted his share of the burden, Roscoe noticed how he watched the officer with a kind of apprehension, almost terror, in his furtive glance, and kept his eyes upon him as they started away in the darkness. Roscoe was in a mood to think ill of Tom, whom he considered the bungling, stubborn author of their predicament. It pleased him now to believe that Tom was afraid and losing his nerve. He remembered that he had said they would be crucified as a result of Tom's pin-headed error. And he was rather glad to believe that Tom was thinking of that now. |