A FEW years ago a young
English artist, named Reid, who was traveling through this country, stopped for
a day or two at Louisville, having found an old friend there.
He urged this gentleman
to go with him into the mountainous region of Tennessee and North Carolina.
"The
foliage," he said, "will be worth study in September; and besides, I
have an errand there for my brother. He is a house- decorator in London, and
when he was in the Alps last summer, he was told that a wood-carver, whose work
he saw in Berne, and fancied, had emigrated to America two or three years ago,
turned farmer, and joined a small German colony in these mountains. I am to
find this colony if I can, and if there is any workman of real skill in it, to
offer him regular work and good wages in London. My brother is in immediate
need of a panel-carver."
"He could have
imported a dozen from Berne."
"Certainly,"
said Reid, with a shrug; "but Tom has his whims. He fancied that he
detected a delicacy, a spirit in this man's work--an undiscovered Bewick, in
fact. Where do you suppose the fellow is hidden, Pomeroy? Do you know of any
such colony?"
"No, and I hardly
can believe that there are any thrifty Germans among those impregnable
mountains. Why, access to many of the counties is only to be had on mules, and
at the risk of your neck. Your German must have a market for his work; he would
find none there."
They were talking in
the breakfast room of the hotel. A man at the same table looked up and nodded.
"Beg pardon, but
couldn't help overhearing. Think the place you want is in South Carolina. Name
of Walhalla. Village. Queer little corner. Oconee county."
"Oh, thanks!"
said Reid, eyeing him speculatively, as probably a new specimen of the
American. "Any Swiss there, do you know?"
"That I can't tell
you, sir," said the stranger, expanding suddenly into the geniality of an
old acquaintance. "They're Germans, I take it. Shut out of the world by
the mountains as completely as if the place was a 'hall of the dead,' as they
call it. There it is, with German houses and German customs, dropped down right
into the midst of Carolina snuff-rubbers, and Georgian clay-eaters. I found the
village five years ago, while I was buying up skins in the mountains. I'm a fur
dealer. Cincinnati. One of my cards, gentlemen?" * * *
To Walhalla, therefore,
Mr. Reid and his friend went. They tried to strike a bee-line to it, through a
wilderness of mountain ranges, by trails known only to the trappers; taking
them as their guides, and sleeping in their huts at night. After two weeks of
climbing among the clouds, of solitary communion with Nature, of unmitigated
dirt, fried pork, and fleas, they came in sight of Walhalla.
They had reached Macon
county, North Carolina, where the Appalachian range, which stretches like a
vast bulwark along the eastern coast of the continent, closes abruptly in walls
of rock, jutting like mighty promontories into the plains of Georgia and South
Carolina.
Reid and Pomeroy
stopped one morning on one of these heights, to water their mules at a spring,
from which two streams bubbled through the grass and separated, one to flow
into the Atlantic, the other into the Gulf of Mexico, so narrow and steep was
the ridge on which they stood. The wind blew thin and cold in their faces; the
sun shone brightly about them; but below, great masses of cumulus clouds were
driven, ebbing like waves, out toward the horizon. Far down in the valley a
rain-storm was raging. It occupied but small space, and looked like a
motionless cataract of gray fog, torn at times by yellow, jagged lightning.
Not far from the spring
a brown mare was tethered, and near it a stout young man in blue homespun was
lying, stretched lazily out on the dry, ash-colored moss, his chin in his
palms, watching the storm in the valley. An empty sack had served as a saddle
for the mare; slung about the man's waist was a whisky flask and a horn. He was
evidently a farmer, who had come up into the mountains to salt his wild cattle.
Reid took note of the
clean jacket, the steady blue eyes, the red rose in his cap.
"Swiss," he
said to Pomeroy. "Where is Walhalla, my friend?"
The man touched his
cap, and pointed to a wisp of smoke at the base of the mountain. As they rode
on, his dog snuffed curiously at their horses' heels, but Hans did not raise
his head to look after them.
"That is the first
man I have seen in America," said Reid, "who took time to look at the
world he lived in."
When they were gone,
Hans lay watching the cloud below soften from a metallic black mass into pearly
haze; then it drifted up into films across the green hills. On the nearer plain
below, he could now see the white-bolled cotton-fields, wet and shining after
the shower; threads of mist full of rainbow lights traced out the
water-courses; damp, earthy scents came up to the height from the soaked
forests. After a long while he rose leisurely, his eyes filled with
satisfaction, as one who has had a good visit in the home of a friend. He
mounted the mare and rode down the trail; the sun shone ruddily on the peaks
above him, but there was a damp, shivering twilight in the gorges. Both seemed
holiday weather to the young fellow; his mare whinnied when he patted her neck;
the dog ran, barking and jumping upon him; it was a conversation that had been
going on for years among old friends.
Mr. Reid reached
Walhalla just before sundown. As his mule went slowly down the wide street, he
looked from side to side with pleased surprise.
"It is a street
out of some German village," he said. "I have not seen such thrift or
homely comfort in this country."
"It is only the
hidden contrast to the grandeur and dirt behind us," said Pomeroy.
"If you miss the repose and exaltation of the lofty heights which you
talked of, you will find scrubbed floors and flea-less beds a solid
consolation."
The sleepy hamlet
consisted of but one broad street, lined by quaint wooden houses, their stoops
covered with grape-vines or roses. Back of these houses stretched trim gardens,
gay with dahlias and yellow wall-flowers; back of these, again, were the farms.
Along the middle of the street, at intervals, were shaded wells, public scales,
a platform for town meetings. The people were gathered about one of the wells,
in their old German fashion, the men with their pipes, the women with their
knitting.
Reid remained in
Walhalla for two or three days. He found that there were several Swiss families
and that many of the men had been wood-carvers at home. He hit upon a plan to
accomplish his purpose. He gave a subject for a panel,--the Flight into
Egypt,-- and announced that any one who chose might undertake the work; that he
would return in a month (he had found there was access to Columbia by railway
through the valley), and would then buy the best panel offered at a fair price,
and, if the skill shown in the work satisfied him, would send the carver to
London free of expense, and insure him high and steady wages.
The day he left, all
the village collected about the well to talk the matter over. Here was a
strange gust from the outer world blowing into their dead calm! Most of them
had forgotten that there was a world outside of Walhalla. They tilled their
farms and bartered with the mountaineers. Twice a year Schopf went to Charlotte
for goods to fill his drowsy shop. London? Riches? Fame? The blast of a strange
trumpet, truly. The blood began to quicken. Such of them as had been
wood-carvers felt their fingers itch for the knife.
"No doubt it is
George Heller who will win it," everybody said. "That fellow has
ambition to conquer the world. Did you see how he followed the Englishman
about? He could talk to them in their own fashion. George is no ordinary
man!"
"If Hans had but
his wit now!" said one, nodding as Hans on his mare came down the street.
"Hans is a good fellow. But he will never make a stir in the world. Now,
George's fingers used to be as nimble as his tongue."
Heller's tongue,
meanwhile, was wagging nimbly enough at the other side of the well. He was a
little, wiry, red-haired, spectacled fellow, with a perpetual movement and
sparkle about him, as if his thoughts were flame.
"That's the right
sort of talk. Fame--profit! Why should we always drag behind the world here at
Walhalla? Plough and dig, plough and dig! The richest man in New York left
Germany a butcher's son, with his wallet strapped on his back; and what is New
York to London? Just give me a foothold in London and I'll show you what a
baker's son can do, let Hans Becht laugh as he chooses!" For Hans, who had
come down to the well, was listening with a quizzical twinkle in his eye. He
filled his pipe, laughed, sat down and said nothing. Everybody knew Hans to be
the most silent man in Walhalla.
The pretty girls
gathered shyly closer to Heller; and the boys thrust their hands in their
pockets and stared admiringly up at him. Hans was their especial friend, but
what a stout, common- place creature he was beside this brilliant fellow!
"A man only needs
a foothold in this world!" George said, adjusting his spectacles and
looking nervously toward a bench where a young girl sat holding her baby
brother. The child was a solid lump of flesh, but she looked down at him with
the tenderest eyes in the world. The sight of her drove the blood through
Heller's veins almost as hotly as the smell of a glass of liquor would do.
"Oh, if I win, I'll take a wife from Walhalla!" he cried, laughing
excitedly, looking at her and not caring that the whole village saw his look.
"I'll come back for the girl I love!" He fancied that the shy eye had
caught the fire from his own and answered with a sudden flash.
Hans thought so, too;
his pipe went out in his mouth. When she rose to go home, he took the heavy boy
out of her arms, and walked beside her. Heller's shrill voice sounded behind
them like a vehement fife. . . . "Success. . . . money . . . .
money!"
Hans looked anxiously
down into her face.
"They are good
things," she said, "very good things."
Hans's tongue was tied
as usual. He dropped Phil in the cradle in the kitchen, and then came out and
led Christine down to the garden of his own house.
What was London--money,
to home? Surely she must see that! He led her slowly past the well-built barn
and piggeries, past the bee-hives hidden behind the cherry-trees, and seated
her on the porch. He thought these things would speak for him. Hans clung as
closely to his home as Phil yonder to his mother's breast. But Christine looked
sullen.
Hans said nothing.
"A man should not
be satisfied with a kitchen garden," she said sharply.
They sat on the porch
steps. The night air was warm and pure, the moon hung low over the rice fields
to the left, throwing fantastic shadows that chased each other like noiseless
ghosts as the wind swayed the grain. To the right, beyond the valley, the
mountains pierced the sky. They were all so friendly, but dumb-- dumb as
himself. If they could only speak and say of how little account money was,
after all! It seemed to Hans as if they were always just going to speak!
But Christine did not
look at sky, or mountains, or sleeping valley. She looked at the gravel at her
feet, and gave it a little kick.
"No doubt George
Heller will succeed. I hope he will, too!" she said vehemently. "If a
man has the real stuff in him let him show it to the world! I'll go home now,
Mr. Becht."
That evening Hans's
violin was silent. He used to play until late in the night; but he was
sharpening his long unused knives, with a pale face. He, too, was beginning a
Flight into Egypt.
During the next two
weeks a tremendous whittling went on in Walhalla. Some old fellows, who had
never cut anything but paper- knives and match-boxes, were fired with the
universal frenzy. Why should not Stein, the cobbler, or Fritz, the butcher,
chip his way to wealth, fame, and London? There is not a butcher or cobbler of
us all who does not secretly believe himself a genius equal to the best--barred
down by circumstance. George Heller kept his work secret, but he was mightily
stirred by it in soul and body. Twice, in a rage, he broke the panel into bits,
and came out pale and covered with perspiration; he walked about muttering to
himself like one in a dream; he went to Godfrey Stein's inn and drank wine and
brandy, and then more brandy, and forgot to pay. Genius is apt to leave the
lesser virtues in the lurch. He kicked the dogs out of the way, cursed the
children, and was insolent to his old father who still fed and clothed him.
"He's no better
than a wolf's whelp!" said Stein. "But he's got the true artist soul.
He'll win!" Now if anybody knew the world, it was Godfrey Stein.
Nobody thought Hans
Becht would win but his old mother. She was sure of it. She sat beside him with
her knitting, talking all the time. Why did he not give himself more time? The
rice-field must be flooded? Let the rice go this year. He spent three hours in
the cotton this morning. And what with foddering the stock, and rubbing down
even the pigs--. What were cotton and pigs to this chance? It would come but
once a life-time.
Meanwhile, Hans, when
free from pigs and rice and cotton, sat by the window and cut, cut, and
whistled softly. The door of the kitchen stood open, and the chickens came
picking their way on to the white floor. A swift stream of water ran through the
millet field and across the garden, shining in the sun. The red rhododendrons
nodded over it, and the rowan bushes, scarlet with berries. Beyond the millet
field, there was a rampart of rolling hills, bronzed with the early frost; but
here blazed the crimson leaves of the shonieho, and there a cucumber tree
thrust its open golden fruit, studded with scarlet seeds, through the dull
back-ground. Beyond this rising ground were the peaks, indistinct as gray
shadows, holding up the sky.
Sometimes Mother Becht
caught Hans with his knife idle, looking at these far off heights, or at the
minnows glancing through the brook near at hand. There was a great pleasure in
his eyes.
"You are a fool to
throw away your time," she cried. "Can you cut that red weed or the
sky into your wood? You could not even paint them."
"God forbid that
anybody should try!" thought Hans.
"Stick to your
work! work counts. The things that count in the world are those which push you
up among your neighbors."
Hans began to cut a tip
to Joseph's nose.
"The things which
count in the world--" he queried to himself. He did his thinking very
slowly. His blind father sat outside in the sun; he came in every hour or two
to hear how the work was going on, and then went to Schopf's shop to report.
His wife told him that there was no doubt that Hans would succeed.
"Joseph is good,
and Mary is very fine," she said. "But the mule is incomparable. If
you could only see the mule! When Hans goes to London, do you think he will
take us at once, or send for us in the spring? I think it would be safer to
cross the ocean in the spring. But it will not matter to cabin-passengers--no
steerage for us, then, father! He will be taking three of us--"
"Eh? How's that?
Three?"
"Christine,"
she said, with a significant chuckle. "Oh, she'll be glad enough to take
our Hans, then! She's had to work her fingers to the bone. She knows the weight
of a full purse."
"Hans is welcome
to bring her home whether he wins or not," said Father Becht. "He
earns the loaf, and it's big enough for four. There's not a sweeter voice in
Walhalla than Christy Vogel's."
"She's well
enough," said Mrs. Becht, cautiously. "Vogel's tobacco brought half a
cent in the pound more than ours, and it was Christine's raising and drying.
Her beer's fair, too. I've tasted it." She went in and talked to Hans.
"Only win; and Christine will marry you. She'll follow the full
purse."
"She'll follow the
man she loves, and that is not I," thought Hans, and he stopped whistling.
His mother's voice sounded on, click-click.
"When we are
rich--when we are in London--when we drive in a carriage--"
"She, too?"
he considered, looking out thoughtfully about him at the fat farm-lands, the
pleasant house, the cheery fire, and then away to the scarlet rowan burning in
the brown undergrowth, and the misty, heaven-reaching heights.
Even his mother counted
these things as nothing beside fame, London, money. Was he then mad or a fool?
Nobody thought he would
win. Yet, everybody stopped to look in the window, with "good-luck,
Hans!"
"See what a
favorite you are, my lad," said his mother. "There's not a man or a
woman in Walhalla to whom you have not done a kindness. Do you think the Lord
does not know you deserve success? If He does not give you the prize instead of
that drunken Heller, there's no justice in heaven!"
At last the Englishman
returned. The decision was to be made that night. Hans had finished his panel
that very day. He did not know whether it was bad or good. He had cut away at
it as faithfully as he had rubbed down his pigs. He wrapped it up that evening
and went down to the inn, stopping at Vogel's on the way. The old people were
at the well; Christine had cooked the supper, milked the cows, and now she was
up in her chamber singing little Phil to sleep.
Her voice came down to
Hans below full of passion and sadness.
"Who is it she
loves in that way?" he wondered. He stood in the path of the little yard,
listening. Heller, coming across the street eyed the square-jawed, heavy
figure. What an awkward figure it was, to be sure. How the linen clothes bagged
about it! He glanced down at his own natty little legs and shining boots, and
tossed his head jerkily. He carried his panel wrapped in cloth, and came in,
banging the gate after him.
"Is that you,
Becht? Been whittling, too?" he said, with an insolent chuckle.
Hans looked at him
steadfastly, not hearing a word that he said. Was it Heller she loved? If he
were sure of it, he would not speak a word for himself. No matter what became
of him, if she were content. He was hurt to the core.
Christine came down.
She wore some stuff of pale blue, and had fastened a bunch of wild roses in her
bosom. She was so silent and cold with both the young men that one could hardly
believe that it was the woman who had sung with such passionate longing over
the child.
"Now you shall see
my panel!" cried Heller, nervously adjusting his spectacles. He set it on
the bench and dragged off the cloth.
"Ah-h!" cried
Christine, clasping her hands; then she turned anxiously to Hans.
Hans was not ready with
his words. His eyes filled with tears. He laid his hand on Heller's shoulder
with hearty good- will. The work gave him keen pleasure. In the face of the
mother bending over the child there was that inscrutable meaning which he found
in the quiet valleys, the far heights. But Heller, oddly, did not seem to see
it.
"Yes, very nice
bits of chipping there!" pulling at his red moustache. "I shall ask
fifty dollars for that."
Christine turned her
searching eyes on him.
"Yes, fifty,"
he repeated, feeling that he had impressed her.
Hans, too, looked at
him wondering. How could this paltry sot compel the secret into his work, which
to him was but a holy dream? Christine was watching him anxiously.
"Is that your
panel?" she said at last.
Hans nodded, hesitated
a moment, and then broke the thin bit of wood in two and flung it into the
road.
"It was nothing
but a passably cut mule," he said.
Heller laughed loud.
"Well, time to be
off. Wish me good luck, Christine!"
She smiled and walked
with him to the gate. Hans followed, but she did not once look at Hans. As she
opened the gate Heller laid his hand quickly on hers; a rose fell from her
dress, he caught it and pressed it to his lips. His breath was rank with
liquor. Hans thrust him back and strode between them.
"This must end.
Christine, you must choose between this man and me."
"I can easily do
that," she said, quickly.
Heller laughed. Hans
gulped down a lump in his throat.
"Not
to-night," he said.
By to-morrow, no doubt,
Heller would be known as successful, the man whose purse would always be full.
Christine must know precisely what she was choosing. It was like Hans to think
of these things. If--in spite of it all--she came to him--
"There is another
rose on your breast. Send it to-morrow to the man you love."
"I will." She
did not look at him. She was as pale as himself. He went down the street,
leaving her with Heller.
Two hours afterward he
went to the inn where Reid was, and sat on a bench at the door. Half the village
was inside waiting to hear the decision. His heart beat rebelliously against
his breast. What if, after all, there had been great hidden merit in his panel?
It was only natural that Christine should be won by clap-trap of success and
money--she was only a woman. "But no," he answered himself,
"what I am--I am. I want no varnish of praise or money."
Out came the crowd.
"I knew it!"
"The most worthless lout in Walhalla!" "A drunkard for
luck!" "He goes to London next week."
"Then he must come
back for his wife," said Stein. "He told me to-night he was betrothed
to Christy."
Hans stood up, and
nodded good-night to them as he pushed through the crowd. He did not go home. A
damp breeze blew up the valley. Down yonder were the far-reaching meadows, the
lapping streams, the great friendly trees. He went to them as a child goes to
its mother in trouble.
About six miles from
Walhalla lies the trunk line of the Atlanta and Richmond railroad. At ten
o'clock that evening, the moon being at the full, the engineer of the express
train, going north, saw a man at a turn of the road signaling him vehemently to
stop. Now, a way train in that leisurely region will pull up for any signal.
But this engineer looked out in calm contempt.
"Reckon he don't
know the express!" he said. A little child in the cars saw the man
gesticulating wildly and laughed at him through the open window.
The man disappeared
over the brow of the hill. The road made a long circuit around its base. When
the engine came around this bend, the engineer, Hurst, saw on the track in
front, a prison hand-car used to transport the convict laborers from one
division to another. The convicts had been taken to the stockade for the night,
and the driver of the car was inside of it, dead drunk.
Hurst had been twenty
years in his business; he understood the condition of affairs at a glance. He
knew it meant death to all those people in the crowded cars behind him, to him
first of all. He whistled down brakes, but he knew it was of no use. The brakes
were of the old kind, and before the train could be slackened it would be upon
the solid mass in front.
"We're done for,
Zack," he said to the fireman. He did not think of jumping off his engine.
It is noticeable how few common- place men try to shirk death when in the
discharge of duty.
The brakes were of no
use. The engine swept on, hissing, shrieking.
Suddenly Hurst saw that
the car was backing!--creeping like a snail; but assuredly backing.
"Y-ha!"
yelled Zack.
Hurst saw the man who
had warned him standing on the platform of the car, working it. Now, it
required at least four men to work that car.
In another minute the
engine would be upon him.
"God!" You'll
be killed!" shouted Hurst. The terrible hardihood of the man stunned him
into forgetting that anybody else was in danger. At that instant from the train
came a frightful shriek--women's voices. The passengers for the first time saw
their danger.
It was but a point of
time, yet it seemed like an hour. The train did not abate its speed. The man, a
short fellow of powerful build, threw the strength of a giant into his
straining muscles, his white face with its distended eyes was close in front in
the red glare of the engine.
Hurst shut his eyes. He
muttered something about Joe,--Joe was his little boy.
The train jarred with a
long scrunching rasp, and--stopped. They were saved.
"Great God!"
prayed Hurst. "Tight squeak for your life, Zack," he said aloud,
wetting his lips with his tongue.
The people poured out
of the train. They went up to the car, some laughing, some swearing. But every
man there felt as if Death had taken his soul into his hold for a moment, and
then let it go.
Three stout men tried
to move the car. They could not do it.
"Who is that
fellow?"
"A workman on the
road?"
"No," said
Hurst.
"Where is
he?" asked several.
For he had vanished as
if the earth had swallowed him up.
"He was a
youngish, light complexioned fellow," said Zack. "Most likely a
Deutcher from Walhalla."
"Whoever he may
be, he saved our lives," said a director of the road. "I never saw
such desperate courage. I vote for a testimonial."
The American soul
exults in testimonials, and the Southerner is free with his money. There
happened, too, to be a delegation of New York merchants on board, who valued
their lives at a pretty figure. More than all, there was a widow from
California, the owner of millions and of the pretty boy who had looked out of
the window. "He saved my baby," she said with a sob, as she took the
paper.
The testimonial grew
suddenly into a sum which made Hurst wink with amazement when he heard of it.
"That fellow will be king in Walhalla," he said.
It was near morning
when Hans came home. He went to his room, said his prayers, and slept heavily.
The next morning the village was on fire with excitement. The inn was full of
passengers from the train; the story was in everybody's mouth. The director of
the road had driven over from the station. When Hans went down to the pasture
that morning he saw a placard stating the facts and the sum subscribed, and
requesting the claimant to present himself at the station that evening for
identification by Hurst.
Hans went on to the
pasture. When he came back and was at work in the garden, he could hear through
the paling the people talking as they went by.
"He will be the
richest man in Walhalla."
"The director says
the company will give him a situation for life. So they ought!"
Nothing else was talked
of. The contests of yesterday and all the Flights into Egypt were forgotten.
"Ah, how lucky
that fellow is," he heard his mother say on the sidewalk. "And
there's Heller! Some people are born to luck!" looking over the palings
with bitter disappointment at Hans, digging potatoes.
But blind Father Becht
listened in silence. He knew but one man in the world brave enough for such a
deed. "I give that lad my blessing!" he said, striking his cane on
the ground. He, too, turned toward Hans digging potatoes.
"Heller is packing
to be off to London," somebody said. "They say Vogel's pretty
daughter is to follow in the spring."
Hans stuck in his spade
and went to his mother. "I am going to salt the cattle on the north
mountain," he said.
"Very well. He
does not care to know who this brave lad is," she said to his father.
"He's a good boy, but dull--dull. They say there is a woman from
California at the inn. She says she must see the man who saved her boy's life.
She is rich and has her whims, no doubt."
Night came, but the man
did not present himself. The next day the director, who was of a generous,
impatient temper, offered a reward to anybody who could make him known. It was
certain he had told nobody what he had done, or they would have come forward
for the reward. The excitement grew with every hour. Hans returned late in the
next day. He went to his spade and began to dig the rest of the potatoes. His
mother followed.
"Well," she
exclaimed, "he is not found! The story is gone by telegraph to all parts
of the country. Here are fame and riches waiting for him. Some people certainly
are born on lucky Sundays. There is Heller, the drunken beast, gone off to
London. And you must dig potatoes! There's no justice in heaven!"
She clicked away,
knitting as she went.
Now I may as well say
here that although this happened years ago, the missing man is not yet found.
He is the mystery and pride of all that region. The director put the money out
at compound interest, but it is yet unclaimed.
Concerning Hans,
however, who digs his potatoes in the same patch, we have something more to
tell. When he had finished digging that morning he went into the house. The
stout fellow had lost his ruddy color, as though he had lately gone through
some heavy strain of body or soul. He sat on the kitchen steps and played a
soft air on his violin. The earth he had been digging lay in moist, black
heaps. He liked the smell of it. How like a whispering voice was the gurgle of
the stream through the roots of the sumachs! Yonder was a Peruvian tree,
raising its trunk and branches in blood-red leaves against the still air; far
beyond were the solemn heights. He had just come from there. He knew how quiet
it was yonder near the sky--how friendly. All these things came, as he played,
into the music and spoke through it, and a great stillness shone in his eyes.
And at that moment--he
never forgot it in all his life--a woman's hand brushed his cheek, and a red
rose came before his eyes.
"You did not come
for the rose, so I brought it to you," said Christine.
Later in the morning
they went to the well together; all their neighbors were there, and it was soon
known they were betrothed. Everybody took Hans by the hand. He had never
guessed he had so many friends. "There is no better fellow in the
world," they said to one another. "He deserves luck."
"That is why I was
impatient with you," whispered Christine. "I could not bear to see
that miserable Heller carry away all the praise and the money."
"These are not the
things in the world that count," said Hans, quietly.
Presently an open
carriage drove through the street.
"That is the lady
who was in the train," the people whispered. "That is her boy. She
says she will not go until she finds the man who saved them."
The lady, smiling, held
her baby up that it might see the women. She was greatly amused and interested
by the quaint German village. When the boy caught sight of Hans he laughed and
held out his hands. The mother nodded kindly. "The brave man who saved us also
wore a workman's dress, I am told," she said. "My boy saw him as he
passed."
Hans took the child in
his arms for a moment, and kissed him. When he gave him back to his mother his
eyes were full of tears. Then the carriage drove on.
He stood at the door of
the home that was so dear to him. Christine held his hand, the sun shone
cheerfully about him.
"To think,"
said his mother, "that we are not to know who that brave fellow was."
His blind father took
Hans's other hand softly in his.
"God knows,"
he said.
But no one heard him.