"Soon after that a troop of Prussian lancers rode quietly into the village, alert for surprises, for they had confidently expected to see French soldiers ere this. Not a French soldier was in sight, so the invaders concluded there was nothing to fear. However, they decided to question some of the villagers.
"The house that Jeanne lived in was the first one the lancers came to.
Jeanne, like others, had taken to the cellar with her parents, where they remained for a long time, tremblingly awaiting the arrival of their enemies. Not a sound thus far having been heard, the family wondered if the Prussians had come and gone. They fervently hoped this were true.
""I will go and find out," volunteered the little girl.
""It is not safe," objected the mother. "If they are still here and should discover you, all would not be well with you, my daughter. You might be killed. I cannot permit it."
""Have no fears, mother; I will listen for every sound in the street and will go no further than the door. They shall neither see nor hear me."
"The mother gave a reluctant consent and Jeanne crept upstairs, stepped quietly to the door and unbolted it, intending to open the door a few inches and peer out.
"At that instant the door was rudely forced open from the outside. A German officer and several men pushed their way in. The officer caught Jeanne in a listening att.i.tude.
""Halt!" he commanded, the lances of his men thrust out so close to the little girl that it seemed as if they already had pierced her.
"Listening, are you?"
""Yes, monsieur," she answered truthfully.
""Why?"
""That I might know if you had gone so I might once more go out to the street."
"The officer laughed.
""You have nothing to fear if you tell us the truth. We would have certain information from you, child."
""Yes, monsieur."
""If you do not truthfully answer all my questions, you and all the rest will be shot."
""I do not fear you, sir. I will answer you well."
""Good. Then tell me, are there any French soldiers here?"
""There are none here, sir."
""Neither here nor elsewhere in the village?"
""There are none here, as I have said. I know not whether there are any in the village or not, for I have not seen any since a detachment pa.s.sed through here two days ago."
""Is this the truth?"
"She looked at the officer with an expression of amazement that he should doubt her word.
""Come, I will show you; I will prove to you that what I say is the truth."
""It is well," answered the Prussian officer, now rea.s.sured. "We will pa.s.s on. It is good that you have not lied to us, child," he said.
"It were better if all the French were so truthful, but, alas, they are not. Forward!"
"The Prussians departed, Jeanne watching them from the door. "No, there are no French soldiers here," she chuckled. "Perhaps there may be just outside the village. And if so, alas for the Prussians!"
"A short distance beyond the village stood a large farmhouse in a vast yard, the latter being surrounded by a high stone wall. Within were trees and shade, so the place looking very attractive to the tired Prussians. Their commander ordered a halt and, opening the gate that led to the grounds, he ordered his men in for a rest. They tied their horses to trees and threw themselves down on the gra.s.s in great content.
"The place seemed deserted, but that some one was about was evidenced when the gate through which they had entered was quietly closed and locked by no less a person than the little Jeanne herself. She had followed the Prussians at a distance, hoping to be able to give a signal to her friends if they might still be in the farmhouse, but, finding a better opportunity for serving them, had locked the lancers within the enclosure. Having done this, she ran as fast as her nimble feet would carry her for her own home.
"The tired lancers lay down to sleep while their commander strolled up to the house and beat on the door with the hilt of his saber. To his amazement the door was suddenly jerked open and a French dragoon dragged him in by the collar. The commander was a prisoner.
"A detachment of French soldiers were secreted in the house, where they had been waiting for some days for this very opportunity, knowing that the Prussians were headed that way. Yet, though the German commander had been deceived, little Jeanne had not told him an untruth. She knew the French soldiers had been at the farmhouse three days before, for she had taken food to them, but she did not know of her own knowledge that they still were there. If she did not tell the officer the whole truth it was because he had not asked her, and for the sake of her beloved France she would not volunteer information that would aid the Germans.
""Betrayed!" raged the Prussian when he saw how neatly he had been tricked. He groaned when a volley rang out from the house and several of his lancers fell.
"His men made a frantic rush for their horses; then, when they discovered that the gate was locked and that they were caught, they threw up their hands and surrendered to the foe that they had not yet seen.
"The French made everyone of the lancers a prisoner. Several had been wounded, but none was killed.
"Credit was given to little Jeanne for placing the lancers in the hands of the French soldiers, for had she not done this the French would have attacked the Prussians in the open and might have lost many men in the fight that would have followed.
"For her part in this fine capture little Jeanne in time received a letter from the President of the French Republic, thanking her in the name of France for her quick wit and for her heroism."
CHAPTER VIII
THE CHILD DESPATCH BEARER
"You already have heard of some of the heroic little despatch bearers of France," said Captain Favor. "I shall now tell you of little Henri, one of the bravest and most resourceful of them all.
"Despatch carrying is a desperate business, all of it exposing the bearers to enemy fire at least part of the time, for most of the work of these brave men is in the open where the enemy can see them. Some go on foot, others on fast motorcycles. Ordinarily they travel in pairs, so that in case one be killed the other may take the message and hasten on with it to its destination. Henri, however, traveled alone.
"The Germans, at some distance from the princ.i.p.al battle line and at one end of it, had advanced several miles into French territory, and, spreading out, had covered considerable ground. They were making themselves a nuisance, as they usually did, and a French force was sent in to drive them back. The French, too, had spread out and the officer in command, after becoming a little more familiar with conditions, had made his plans.
""Now," said the French colonel, "what I wish is a man of undoubted courage, familiar with all this surrounding country, to carry letters to the commanders of our various units."
""I fear you will not find such a man," answered one of his lieutenants. "All the men of this section, of course, are fighting."
""Young Henri can do it," suggested another officer.
""A civilian who has been attached to the army unofficially for some few weeks." Henri had made himself so useful that his presence with the army was not only permitted, but welcomed. While he was but thirteen years of age, he was very strong, alert and active. The colonel told his aide to summon the boy so the commander might look him over.
""Why do you follow the army?" demanded the colonel, after observing the boy critically.
""Our home has been destroyed by the Germans, my father has been taken prisoner by them and my sisters have fled to other provinces," he answered simply. "That is why I am trying to serve my country in every way I can."
"The colonel nodded approvingly.