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A QUEER CONVERSATION
"We were here all the time, d.i.c.k," said Ursula soon after the first outburst of joyful greeting had subsided, "and we all tried our level best to catch your eye but, goodness--you were so military you would look neither to the right nor left," and she straightened her back and puffed out her cheeks in comic imitation of her brother on parade.
"It is quite as well I didn't see you, for if I had, I'd have forgotten every bit of military discipline I've absorbed since being here,"
responded d.i.c.k, smiling good-naturedly at his sister's mockery; "as it was I came near making a break when Hank Cabell pointed you out to me; but fortunately he grabbed me and saved my reputation as a marine."
"Is 'Hank,' as you call him, the boy about whom you wrote to us--the Southerner?" inquired d.i.c.k's father.
"Yes, Dad, and I want you to meet him. He's a dandy chap and comes from a good family, though I believe they are very poor, and likewise very proud."
"Sometimes that combination isn't all that could be desired as an a.s.set," drily remarked Mr. Comstock.
"But he is all right, Dad," said d.i.c.k, quickly coming to the defense of his friend against any possible insinuation. "There he is now. I'll get him to come over here."
Suiting actions to his words Richard presently returned with Henry, and the formality of introductions over, Mr. Comstock invited his son's friend to join them at luncheon and for the day. Henry's rather sombre face lighted up with pleasure.
"I should be very glad to go, sir, providing I can secure early liberty," he said.
"How about you, d.i.c.k, are you in the same boat as your friend Henry?"
inquired his father.
"No, Dad; you see, when I told Colonel Waverly you were here he excused me for the rest of the day," replied Richard, and turning to Henry he said, "Suppose you hurry up and get permission, Hank, while I go and put away my implements of warfare."
"Implements of war, indeed!" laughed Ursula, pointing banteringly at the drum slung over her brother's shoulder, "and are your weapons as dangerous as my brother's?" asked she, turning her questioning eyes on Henry.
"Mine consists of a bra.s.s trumpet," replied the boy with a smile, "but it has one advantage over the drum as a weapon, for it makes a handy bludgeon in time of need."
"Run along, boys," cautioned Mrs. Comstock, "it is nearly noon and I for one am famished."
"I reckon it would be better for us to get permission to wear cits; it might be less embarra.s.sing for you all," and Henry looked inquiringly at Richard's parents.
"Not for me," interposed d.i.c.k, with some emphasis; "I'm in uniform, and I'm proud of it, and so are my people."
"I didn't mean it in that light," Henry replied, flus.h.i.+ng at the suggested rebuke. "I was merely thinking of your mother and sister and the possibility of saving them embarra.s.sment. You may not know this, but enlisted men in uniform are not greeted cordially everywhere, even here in Was.h.i.+ngton."
"Excuse me, Henry, for being so hasty; I had not thought of that side of the question," said d.i.c.k frankly, and he turned red himself because of his readiness to find fault with his chum's remark.
"Yes, Henry was quite right in what he said," stated Mr. Comstock. "I read of many such incidents in the papers; but there are laws now which slowly but nevertheless surely are making people understand that the enlisted man in uniform may no longer be treated with disrespect. A better cla.s.s of men seem to be joining the colors these days, and they are calling their defamers to a strict accounting. But this is not getting something to satisfy our appet.i.tes. You boys hurry up now and get yourselves ready."
After a bountiful luncheon at one of the best hotels in the city a tour of the capital was proposed and an enjoyable afternoon of sightseeing followed. In d.i.c.k's spare moments during his stay in Was.h.i.+ngton he had visited nearly every one of the public buildings and he took great pleasure in showing his sister about. The three young people even climbed the thousand steps of Was.h.i.+ngton Monument, scorning the slow-moving elevator which carried their elders up the five hundred feet which still left them fifty-five feet beneath the apex of the wonderful shaft.
Ursula was enchanted with this superb view of the "magic city," as she was pleased to call it, and for a long time they all enjoyed the panorama of land and water, field and forest, country and city, spread before them to the distant horizons.
After this they walked back to their hotel, and while Mrs. Comstock enjoyed a little rest before dinner and Mr. Comstock departed on a business engagement the trio of young people occupied themselves in animated conversation in one of the ornate reception rooms.
Feeling that Ursula and Richard might appreciate being alone together for a while, Henry excused himself, promising to return in time for the evening programme, which would not end until after the roof garden supper following the theatre.
After his departure Ursula and d.i.c.k strolled over to one of the low windows and pus.h.i.+ng aside the long curtains which reached to the floor they stepped into the vacant s.p.a.ce of a small narrow balconied window ledge and stood looking at the pa.s.sing traffic. A group of palms, the half-closed blinds and the long curtains effectually concealed them from the view of people inside the room.
The mere fact of being together was happiness in itself for these two devoted young people and gradually a silence fell upon them as they stood absorbed in the scenes outside.
A subdued murmur of voices came from the room behind them, and d.i.c.k heard someone say:
"Here is a quiet place where we may talk freely."
Glancing over his shoulder the boy saw three men seating themselves and deliberately placing their chairs near the window where he and his sister were standing. He was wondering why they took such care with the chairs, when again the same voice gave him the reason.
"We can see from here whomever comes into the room, gentlemen, and it is well to observe caution while discussing this question."
"Shall we speak in German, Senor?" brusquely inquired a heavily built man whose blond hair stood up in short stiff bristles on his head.
"Si, Senor," deferentially replied the third member of the party, a slender, black-haired man whose dark skin announced him a resident of some Latin-American country, and from then on they spoke in the tongue agreed upon, and so quietly that d.i.c.k could not overhear. Knowing that he was an unintentional eavesdropper he turned back again to the street feeling it was unnecessary to move from the window, for unless he made an especial attempt the words of the speakers were inaudible to his ears. A little time pa.s.sed in this way, when suddenly d.i.c.k placed his hand over Ursula's mouth, for she had turned, meaning to address him.
At the same moment he motioned her to be silent.
To both Richard and Ursula Comstock the German spoken language was an open book, for Mrs. Comstock had employed German nursemaids to attend them when they were little tots, and until Ursula was twelve years of age she had had a German governess. Even the cook, a family retainer for years, was a native of Cologne. In consequence the loud remark which d.i.c.k heard from the room behind was as significant as if spoken in English. He knew that the big foreigner from across the ocean had uttered it. There was no mistaking the deep, abrupt, explosive voice.
"The United States can do nothing! Germany can whip her any day!
Germany can whip the whole world; and some day she will!"
The speaker had risen and the others now pushed their chairs back and stood beside him. Their voices came distinctly to the ears of the boy and girl tensely listening in the shadow of the blind.
"Well, I should not go so far as that, you know!" protested the tall man who had led them to the window for their talk and whom d.i.c.k decided was an Englishman.
"Maybe you wouldn't, but it's so," reiterated the German, using his words as a ruffian would a cudgel. "Now, Senor, I must have your decision regarding this ca.n.a.l business at once, or it will be too late to be of any use to us. If your revolution in Nicaragua is a success, will the man you put in the presidential chair grant Germany the ca.n.a.l right-of-way or not?"
"I cannot tell you, Senor. It is a question which must be placed before the committee. I am only empowered to offer you the things already mentioned in return for financing our uprising. The United States has a concession, I believe--had it as far back as eighteen eighty-two. They would not permit us to agree to your proposal."
"I tell you that you are wrong. The United States never made any treaty with Nicaragua. Your government granted a concession to a private corporation in 1897 to build a ca.n.a.l, and they bluffed for a while at digging it on the Atlantic side. The United States also sent a commission down to Nicaragua several times, but nothing came of it. Then they forced Panama into revolt against the Colombian Government, and made her give them the present location. Therefore if you want our money and our secret aid your candidate must agree to Germany's terms."
"Suppose we give Senor Cabanas a few days to consult with his committee," suggested the Englishman in his mild voice.
"The committee knows it already," exclaimed the exasperated Teuton.
"The subject was thrashed out in Leon while I was there six months ago.
I tell you it is subterfuge, pure and simple. They know what we want, and they should have deputized their man to grant our demands."
"Pardon me again, Senor," came the suave voice of the little man, yet his eyes must have flashed ominously at the brutal pounding of the German's heavy voice, "I a.s.sure you that this is absolute news to me."
"It shouldn't be! Your committeemen are a set of vacillating fools; that is all, and the best I can say of them. Go back to them and arrange it; but I warn you--not a mark,--not a single mark, unless----"
"Be careful, Mein Herr, here comes the house detective--they are all secret service men in Was.h.i.+ngton. We had best postpone this and meet again."
It was the Englishman who gave the warning, and with the words the three conspirators moved towards the door leading to the hotel lobby.
Behind the curtains Richard and Ursula still stood, hardly daring to breathe for fear of disclosing their presence. Every word uttered by the plotters since d.i.c.k placed his hand over Ursula's lips had been distinctly heard and understood by both, and they realized the import of the information they had obtained so unintentionally.
Barely had the three men disappeared when d.i.c.k, exclaiming, "Wait for me here!" was running towards the door in pursuit.
Henry Cabell, returning from his self-imposed absence, came around the corner of the entrance at that identical moment, and the lads collided forcibly. The delay caused thereby was sufficient to enable the quarry to efface themselves and though d.i.c.k made a careful search his efforts were futile.