Slowly the evening was deepening into night, but still the glow
from the setting sun lingered in the western sky. The brave little
songster had gone from the top of the elm tree, but from the
shrubbery behind the church a whippoorwill was beginning to tune
his pipe.
"Oh, listen to the darling!" cried Patricia. "I haven't heard one
for a long, long time."
"There used to be a great many in the shrubbery here, and in the
old days the woods nearby were full of them in the evenings," said
Mrs. Templeton.
As they sat listening for the whippoorwill's voice, they became
aware of other sounds floating up to their ears from the town.
The hum of passing motors, the high, shrill laughter of children
playing in the streets, the clang of the locomotive bell from the
railroad station, all softened by distance. But as they listened
there came another sound like nothing they had ever heard in that
place before. A strange, confused rumbling, with cries jutting out
through the dull, rolling noise. A little later came the faint
clash of rhythmic, tumultuous cheering. Patricia's quick ears were
the first to catch the sound.
"Hush!" she cried. "What is that noise?"
Again came the rumbling sound, punctuated with quick volleys of
cheering. The men glanced at each other. They knew well that
sound, a sound they had often heard during the stirring days of the
war, in the streets of the great cities across the seas, and in
other places, too, where men were wont to crowd. As they listened
in tense silence, there came the throbbing of a drum.
"My dear," said Mrs. Templeton faintly to her eldest daughter, "I
think I shall go in."
At once Hugh offered her his arm, while Adrien took the other, and
together they led her slowly into the house.
Meanwhile the others tumbled into Rupert's car and motored down
to the gate, and there waited the approach of what seemed to be a
procession of some sort or other.
At the gate Dr. Templeton, returning from his pastor visitations,
found them standing.
"Come here, Papa!" cried Patricia. "Let us wait here. There is
something coming up the street."
"But what is it?" asked Dr. Templeton. "Does anybody know?"
"I guess it is a strikers' parade, sir. I heard that they were to
organise a march-out to-night. It is rather a ridiculous thing."
Through the deepening twilight they could see at the head of the
column and immediately before the band, a double platoon of young
girls dressed in white, under the command of an officer
distinguished from the others by her red sash, all marching with a
beautiful precision to the tap of the drum. As the head of the
column drew opposite, Patricia touched Vic's arm.
"Vic!" she cried. "Look! Look at that girl! It is Annette!"
"My aunt! So it is!" cried Vic. "Jove! What a picture she makes!
What a swing!"
Behind that swinging company of girls came the band, marching to
the tapping of the drum only. Then after a space came a figure,
pathetic, arresting, moving--a woman, obviously a workman's wife,
of middle age, grey, workworn, and carrying a babe of a few months
in her arms, marched alone. Plainly dressed, her grey head bare,
she walked proudly erect but with evident signs of weariness. The
appearance of that lone, weary, grey-haired woman and her helpless
babe struck hard upon the heart with its poignant appeal, choking
men's throats and bringing hot tears to women's eyes. Following
that lonely figure came one who was apparently the officer in
command of the column. As he came opposite the gate, his eye fell
upon the group there. Swiftly he turned about, and, like a
trumpet, his voice rang out in command:
"Ba-t-t-a-a-lion, halt!! R-r-r-i-g-h-t turn!"
Immediately the whole column came to a halt and faced toward the
side of the street where stood the group within the shadow of the
gate.
"I am going to get Annette," said Patricia to her father, and she
darted off, returning almost immediately with the leader of the
girls' squad.
"What does this mean, Annette? What are you doing? It is a great
lark!" cried Patricia.
"Well, it is not exactly a lark," answered Annette, with a slight
laugh. "You see, we girls want to help out the boys. We are
strikers, too, you know. They asked us to take part in the parade,
and here we are. But it's got away past being a lark," she
continued, her voice and face growing stern. "There is a lot of
suffering among the workers. I know all my money has gone," she
added, after a moment, with a gay laugh.
Meantime, the officer commanding the column had spoken a few words
to the leader of the band, and in response, to the surprise and
dismay of the venerable Doctor, the band struck up that rollicking
air associated with the time-honoured chorus, "For He's a Jolly
Good Fellow." Then all stood silent, gazing at the Doctor, who,
much embarrassed, could only gaze back in return.
"Papa, dear," said Adrien, who with Hugh Maynard had joined them at
the gate, "you will have to speak to them."
"Speak to them, my dear? What in the world could I say? I have
nothing to say to them."
"Oh, but you must, Papa! Just thank them."
"And tell them you are all for them, Daddy!" added Patricia
impulsively.
Then the old Doctor, buttoning his coat tightly about him and
drawing himself erect, said:
"Rupert, please run your car out to the road. Thank you."
Mounting the car, he stood waiting quietly till the cheering had
died down into silence, his beautiful, noble, saintly face lit with
the faint glow that still came from the western sky but more with
the inner light that shines from a soul filled with high faith in
God and compassion for man.
"Gentlemen--" he began.
"Ladies, too, Papa," said Patricia in a clear undertone.
"Ah!" corrected the Doctor. "Ladies and Gentlemen:" while a laugh
ran down the line. "One generally begins a speech with the words
'I am glad to see you here.' These words I cannot say this
evening. I regret more deeply than you can understand the occasion
of your being here at all. And in this regret I know that you all
share. But I am glad that I can say from my heart that I feel
honoured by and deeply moved by the compliment you have just paid
me through your band. I could wish, indeed, that I was the 'jolly
good fellow' you have said, but as I look at you I confess I am
anything but 'jolly.' I have been in too many of your homes during
the last three weeks to be jolly. The simple truth is, I am deeply
saddened and, whatever be the rights or wrongs, and all fair-minded
men will agree that there are rights and wrongs on both sides, my
heart goes out in sympathy to all who are suffering and anxious and
fearful for the future. I will try to do my best to bring about a
better understanding."
"We know that, sir," shouted a voice. "Ye done yer best."
"But so far I and those labouring with me have failed. But surely,
surely, wise and reasonable men can find before many days a
solution for these problems. And now let me beg your leaders to be
patient a little longer, to banish angry and suspicious feelings
and to be willing to follow the light. I see that many of you are
soldiers. To you my heart goes out with a love as true as if you
were my own sons, for you were the comrades of my son. Let me
appeal to you to preserve unbroken that fine spirit of comradeship
that made the Canadian Army what it was. And let me assure you all
that, however our weak and erring human hearts may fail and come
short, the great heart of the Eternal Father is unchanging in Its
love and pity for us all. Meantime, believe me, I shall never
cease to labour and pray that very soon peace may come to us
again." Then, lifting his hands over them while the men uncovered,
he said a brief prayer, closing with the apostolic blessing.
Startled at the burst of cheering which followed shortly after the
conclusion of the prayer, the babe broke into loud crying. Vainly
the weary mother sought to quiet her child, she herself well-nigh
exhausted with her march, being hardly able to stand erect.
Swiftly Adrien sprang from the car and ran out to her.
"Let me carry the babe," she cried, taking the child in her arms.
"Come into the car with me."
"No," said the woman fiercely. "I will go through with it." But
even as she spoke she swayed upon her feet.
With gentle insistence, however, Adrien caught her arm and forced
her toward the car.
"I will not leave them," said the woman stubbornly.
"Speak to her, Annette," said Adrien. "She cannot walk."
"Mrs. Egan," said Annette, coming to her, "it will be quite all
right to go in the car. It will be all the better. Think of the
fine parade it will make."
But, still protesting, the old woman hung back, crying, "Let me go!
I will go through!"
"Sure thing!" cried Patricia. "We will take you along. Where's
Rupert?"
But Rupert, furious and disgusted, hung back in the shadow.
"Here, Vic!" cried Patricia. "You take the wheel!"
"Delighted, I am sure!" cried Vic, climbing into the seat. "Get in
here, Patsy. All set, Colonel," he added, saluting to the officer
in command of the parade, and again the column broke into cheering
as they moved off to the tap of the drum, Rupert's elegant Hudson
Six taking a place immediately following the band.
"All my life I have longed for the spotlight," murmured Vic to his
companion, a delighted grin on his face. "But one can have too
much of a good thing. And, with Wellington, I am praying that
night may come before I reach the haunts of my comrades in arms."
"Why, Vic, do you care?" cried Patricia. "Not I! And I think it
was just splendid of Adrien!"
"Oh, topping! But did you see the gentle Rupert's face? Oh, it
was simply priceless! Fancy this sacred car leading a strikers'
parade." And Vic's body shook with delighted chuckles.
"Don't laugh, Vic!" said Patricia, laying her hand upon his arm.
"The lady behind will see you."
"Steady it is," said Vic. "But I feel as if I were the elephant in
the circus. I say, can we execute a flank movement, or must we go
through to the bitter end?"
"Adrien," said Patricia, "do you think this night air is good for
the baby?"
"We shall go on a bit yet," said Adrien. "Mrs. Egan is very tired
and I am sure will want to go home presently."
But Mrs. Egan was beginning to recover her strength and, indeed,
to enjoy the new distinction of riding in a car, and in this high
company.
"No," she said, "I must go through." She had the look and tone of
a martyr. "They chose me, you see, and I must go through!"
"Oh, very well," said Adrien cheerfully. "We shall just go along,
Vic."
Through the main streets of the town the parade marched and
countermarched till, in a sudden, they found themselves in front of
the McGinnis foundry. Before the gate in the high board fence
which enclosed the property, a small crowd had gathered, which
greeted the marching column with uproarious cheers. From the
company at the gate a man rushed forward and spoke eagerly to the
officer in command.
"By Jove, there's Tony!" said Vic. "And that chap McDonough. What
does this mean?"
After a brief conversation with Tony, who apparently was
passionately pressing his opinion, the officer shook his head and
marched steadily forward. Suddenly Tony, climbing upon the fence,
threw up his hand and, pointing toward the foundry, shouted forth
the single word, "Scabs!" Instantly the column halted. Again
Tony, in a yell, uttered the same word, "Scabs!" From hundreds of
throats there was an answering roar, savage, bloodthirsty as from a
pack of wild beasts. Tony waved his hand for silence.
"Scabs!" he cried again. "McGinnis strike-breakers! They came to-
night. They are in there!" He swung his arm around and pointed to
the foundry. "Shall we give them a welcome? What do you say,
boys?" Again and more fiercely than before, more terribly cruel,
came the answering roar.
"Here, this is no place for you!" cried Vic. "Let's get out." At
his touch the machine leaped forward, clear of the crowd.
"Annette!" cried Adrien, her hand on Vic's shoulder. "Go and get
her!"
Halting the car, Vic leaped from the wheel, ran to where the girls'
squad was halted and caught Annette by the arm.
"Annette," he said, "get your girls away from here quick! Come
with us!"
But Annette laughed scornfully at him.
"Go with you? Not I! But," she added in a breathless undertone,
"for God's sake, get your ladies and the baby away. These people
won't know who you are. Move quick!"
"Come with us, Annette!" implored Vic. "If you come, the rest will
follow."
"Go! Go!" cried Annette, pushing him. Already the crowd were
tearing the fence to pieces with their hands, and rocks were
beginning to fly.
Failing to move the girl, Vic sprang to the wheel again.
"I will get you away from this, anyway," he said.
"But Annette!" cried Patricia. "We can't leave her!"
But Vic made no reply, and at his touch the machine leaped forward,
and none too soon, for already men were crowding about the car on
every side.
"We are well out of that!" said Vic coolly. "And now I will take
you all home. Hello! They're messing up McGinnis's things a bit,"
he added, as the sound of crashing glass came to their ears.
Through the quiet streets the car flew like a hunted thing, and in
a very few minutes they were at the Rectory door.
"No fuss, now, Patricia," said Adrien. "we must not alarm Mamma.
All steady."
"Right you are! Steady it is!" said Patricia springing from the
car. Quietly but swiftly they got the woman and the child indoors.
"Hugh! Rupert!" said Adrien, speaking in a quiet voice. "Vic
needs you out there. That is a wild car of yours, Rupert," she
added with a laugh. "It fairly flies." Gathering in her hands the
men's hats and sticks, she hurried them out of the door.
"Cheerio!" cried Vic. "A lovely war is going on down at the
McGinnis plant. Get in and let us plan a campaign. First, to
Police Headquarters, I suppose." As they flew through the streets
Vic gave them in a few words a picture of the scenes he had just
witnessed.
They found the Chief of Police in his office. At their first word
he was on the move.
"I was afraid of this thing when that fool parade started," he
said. "Sergeant, send out the general alarm!"
"How many men have you, Chief?" inquired Hugh.
"About twenty-five, all told. But they are all over the town. How
many men are down there?"
"There are five hundred, at least; possibly a thousand, raging like
wild bulls of Bashan."
As he spoke, another car came tearing up and Jack Maitland sprang
from the wheel.
"Are you in need of help, Chief?" he asked quietly.
"All the good men we can get," said the Chief curtly. "But first
we must get the Mayor here. Sergeant, get him on the phone."
"You go for him, Vic," said Jack.
"Righto!" cried Vic. "But count me in on this."
In fifteen minutes Vic was back with the Mayor, helpless with
nervous excitement.
"Get your men out, Chief!" he shouted, as he sprang from the car.
"Get them out quick, arrest those devils and lock 'em up! We'll
show them a thing or two! Hurry up! What are you waiting for?"
"Mr. Mayor," Jack's clear, firm, cool voice arrested the Mayor's
attention. "May I suggest that you swear in some special
constables? The Chief will need help and some of us here would be
glad to assist."
"Yes! Yes! For God's sake, hurry up! Here's the clerk. How do
you swear them in, clerk?"
"The Chief of Police has all the necessary authority."
"All right, Chief. Swear them! Swear them! For heaven's sake,
swear them! Here, you, Maitland--and you, Maynard--and Stillwell--"
With cool, swift efficiency born of his experience in the war, the
Chief went on with his arrangements. In his hands the process of
swearing in a number of special constables was speedily accomplished.
Meantime many cars and a considerable number of men had gathered
about the Police Headquarters.
"What is that light?" cried the Mayor suddenly, pointing in the
direction of the foundry. "It's a fire! My God, Chief, do you see
that fire? Hurry up! Why don't you hurry up? They will burn the
town down."
"All right, Mr. Mayor," said the Chief. "We shall be there in a
few minutes now. Captain Maitland," said the Chief, "I will take
the men I have with me. Will you swear in all you can get within
the next fifteen or twenty minutes, and report to me at the
foundry? Sergeant, you come along with me! I'm off!" So saying,
the Chief commandeered as many cars as were necessary, packed them
with the members of his police force available and with the
specials he had secured, and hurried away.
After the Chief had retired, Jack stood up in his car. "Any of you
chaps want to get into this?" he said, addressing the crowd. His
voice was cheery and cool. At once a dozen voices responded.
"Righto!" "Here you are!" "Put me down!" In less than fifteen
minutes, he had secured between forty and fifty men.
"I want all these cars," he said. "Get in, men. Hold on!" he
shouted at a driver who had thrown in his clutch. "Let no man move
without orders! Any man disobeying orders will be arrested at
once! Remember that no guns are to be used, no matter what
provocation may be given. Even if you are fired on, don't fire in
return! Does any man know where we can get anything in the shape
of clubs?"
"Hundreds of axe handles in our store," said Rupert.
"Right you are! Drivers, fall in line. Keep close up. Now, Mr.
Mayor, if you please."
Armed with axe handles from Stillwell & Son's store, they set off
for the scene of action. Arrived at the foundry they found the
maddest, wildest confusion raging along the street in front of the
foundry, and in the foundry yard which was crowded with men. The
board fence along the front of the grounds had been torn down and
used as fagots to fire the foundry, which was blazing merrily in a
dozen places. Everywhere about the blazing building parties of men
like hounds on the trail were hunting down strike-breakers and, on
finding them, were brutally battering them into insensibility.
Driving his car through the crowd, Maitland found his way to the
Chief. In a few short, sharp sentences, the Chief explained his
plan of operations. "Clear the street in front, and hold it so!
Then come and assist me in clearing this yard."
"All right, sir!" replied Maitland, touching his hat as to a
superior officer, and, wheeling his car, he led his men back to
the thronging street.
Meantime, the Fire Department had arrived upon the scene with a
couple of engines, a hose reel and other fire-fighting apparatus,
the firemen greatly hampered in their operations.
Swinging his car back through the crowd, Maitland made his way to
the street, and set to work to clear the space immediately in front
of the foundry. Parking his cars at one end of the street, and
forming his men up in a single line, he began slowly to press back
the crowd. It was slow and difficult work, for the crowd, unable
to recognise his ununiformed special constables, resented their
attack.
He called Victor to his side. "Get a man with you," he said, "and
bring up two cars here."
"Come along, Rupert," cried Victor, seizing Stillwell, and together
they darted back to where the cars stood. Mounting one of the
cars, Maitland shouted in a loud voice:
"The Chief of Police wants this street cleared. So get back,
please! We don't wish to hurt anyone. Now, get back!" And lining
up level with the cars, the special constables again began to press
forward, using their axe handles as bayonets and seeking to prod
their way through.
High up on a telegraph pole, his foot on one of the climbing
spikes, was a man directing and encouraging the attack. As he drew
near, Maitland discovered this man to be no other than Tony, wildly
excited and vastly enjoying himself.
"Come down, Tony!" he said. "Hurry up!"
"Cheerio, Captain!" shouted Tony. "What about Festubert?"
"Come down, Tony," said Maitland, "and be quick about it!"
"Sorry, can't do it, Captain. I am a fixture here."
Like a cat, Maitland swarmed up the pole and coming to a level with
Tony, struck him swiftly and unexpectedly a single blow. It caught
Tony on the chin. He swung off from the post, hung a moment, then
dropped quietly to the ground. As he fell, a woman's shriek rang
out from the crowd and tearing her way through the line came
Annette, who flung herself upon her brother.
"Here you," said Jack, seizing a couple of men from the crowd, "get
this man in my car. Now, Annette," he continued, "don't make a
fuss. Tony isn't hurt. We'll send him quietly home. Now then,
men, let's have no nonsense," he shouted. "I want this street
cleared, and quick!"
As he spoke, a huge man ran out from the crowd and, with an oath,
flung himself at Maitland. But before he came within striking
distance, an axe handle flashed and the man went down like a log.
"Axe handles!" shouted Maitland. "But steady, men!"
Over the heads of the advancing line, the axe handles swung, men
dropping before them at every step. At once the crowd began a
hasty retreat, till the pressure upon the back lines made it
impossible for those in front to escape. From over the heads of
the crowd rocks began to fly. A number of his specials were
wounded and for a moment the advance hung fire. Down through the
crowd came a fireman, dragging with him a hose preparatory to
getting into action.
"Hello, there!" called Maitland. The fireman looked up at him.
Jack sprang down to his side. "I want to clear this street," he
said. "You can do it for me."
"Well, I can try," said the fireman with a grin, and turning his
hose toward the crowd, gave the signal for the water, holding the
nozzle at an angle slightly off the perpendicular. In a very few
moments the crowd in the rear found themselves under a deluge of
falling water, and immediately they took to their heels, followed
as rapidly as possible by those in front. Then, levelling his
nozzle, the fireman proceeded to wash back from either side of the
street those who had sought refuge there, and before many minutes
had elapsed, the street was cleared, and in command of Maitland's
specials.
Leaving the street under guard, Maitland and his specials went to
the help of the Chief, who was hampered more or less by His
Worship, the Mayor, and very considerably by Mr. McGinnis, who had
meantime arrived, mad with rage and demanding blood, and proceeded
to clear up the foundry yard, and rescue the strike-breakers who
had taken refuge within the burning building and in holes and
corners about the premises. It was no light matter, but under the
patient, good-natured but resolute direction of the Chief, they
finally completed their job, rounding up the strike-breakers in a
corner of the yard and driving off their assailants to a safe
distance.
There remained still the most difficult part of their task. The
strike-breakers must be got to the Police Headquarters, the nearest
available place of safety. For, on the street beyond the water
line, the crowd was still waiting in wrathful mood. The foundry
was a wreck, but even this did not satisfy the fury of the
strikers, which had been excited by the presence of the strike-
breakers imported by McGinnis. For the more seriously injured,
ambulances were called, and these were safely got off under police
guard to the General Hospital.
The Chief entered into consultation with the Mayor:
"The only safe place within reach," he said, "is Police Headquarters.
And the shortest and best route is up the hill to the left. But
unfortunately, that is where the big crowd is gathered. There are
not so many if we take the route to the right, but that is a longer
way round."
"Put the men in your cars, Chief," said McGinnis, "and smash your
way through. They can't stop you."
"Yes, and kill a dozen or so," said the Chief.
"Why not? Aren't they breaking the law?"
"Oh, well, Mr. McGinnis," said the Chief, "it is easy to kill men.
The trouble is they are no use to anybody after they are dead. No,
we must have no killing to-night. To-morrow we'd be sorry for it."
"Let us drive up and see them," suggested the Mayor. "Let me talk
to the boys. The boys know me."
The Chief did not appear to be greatly in love with the suggestion
of the Mayor.
"Well," he said, "it would do no harm to drive up and have a look
at them. We'll see how they are fixed, anyway. I think, Mr.
McGinnis, you had better remain on guard here. The Mayor and
Captain Maitland will come with me."
Commandeering Rupert and his car, the Chief took his party at a
moderate pace up the street, at the top of which the crowd stood
waiting in compact masses. Into these masses Rupert recklessly
drove his car.
"Steady there, Stillwell," warned the Chief. "You'll hurt
someone."
"Hurt them?" said Rupert. "What do you want?"
"Certainly not to hurt anyone," replied the Chief quietly. "The
function of my police force is the protection of citizens. Halt
there!"
The Chief stepped out among the strikers and stood in the glare of
the headlights.
"Well, boys," he said pleasantly, "don't you think it is time to
get home? I think you have done enough damage to-night already. I
am going to give you a chance to get away. We don't want to hurt
anyone and we don't want to have any of you down for five years or
so."
Then the Mayor spoke up. "Men, this is a most disgraceful thing.
Most deplorable. Think of the stain upon the good name of our fair
city."
Howls of derision drowned his further speech for a time.
"Now, boys," he continued, "can't we end this thing right here?
Why can't you disperse quietly and go to your homes? What do you
want here, anyway?"
"Scabs!" yelled a voice, followed by a savage yell from the crowd.
"Men," said the Chief sharply, "you know me. I want this street
cleared. I shall return here in five minutes and anyone seeking to
stop me will do so at his own risk. I have a hundred men down
there and this time they won't give you the soft end of the club."
"We want them sulphurously described scabs," yelled a voice. "We
ain't goin' to kill them, Chief. They're lousy. We want to give
'em a bath." And a savage yell of laughter greeted the remark. On
every hand the word was taken up: "A bath! A bath! The river!
The river!" The savage laughter of the crowd was even more
horrible than their rage.
"All right, boys. We are coming back and we are going through.
Leave this street clear or take your chances! It's up to you!" So
saying, the car was turned about and the party proceeded back to
the foundry.
"What are you going to do, Chief?" inquired the Mayor anxiously.
"There are a lot of soldiers in that crowd," said the Chief. "I
don't like the looks of them. They are too steady. I hate to
smash through them."
Arrived at the foundry, the Chief paced up and down, pondering his
problem. He called Maitland to his side.
"How many cars have we here, Maitland?" he inquired.
"Some fifteen, I think. And there are five or six more parked down
on the street."
"That would be enough," said the Chief. "I hate the idea of
smashing through that crowd. You see, some of those boys went
through hell with me and I hate to hurt them."
"Why not try a ruse?" suggested Maitland. "Divide your party. You
take five or six cars with constables up the hill to that crowd
there. Let me take the strikebreakers and the rest of the cars and
make a dash to the right. It's a longer way round but with the
streets clear, we can arrive at Headquarters in a very few
minutes."
The Chief considered the plan for a few minutes in silence.
"It's a good plan, Maitland," he said at length. "It's a good
plan. And we'll put it through. I'll make the feint on the left;
you run them through on the right. I believe we can pull it off.
Give me a few minutes to engage their attention before you set
out."
Everything came off according to plan. As the Chief's detachment
of cars approached the solid mass of strikers, they slowly gave
back before them.
"Clear the way there!" said the Chief. "We are going through!"
Step by step the crowd gave way, pressed by the approaching cars.
Suddenly, at a word of command, the mass opened ranks and the Chief
saw before him a barrier across the street, constructed of fencing
torn from neighbouring gardens, an upturned delivery wagon, a very
ugly and very savage-looking field harrow commandeered from a
neighbouring market garden, with wicked-looking, protruding teeth
and other debris of varied material, but all helping to produce a
most effective barricade. Silently the Chief stood for a few
moments, gazing at the obstruction. A curious, ominous growl of
laughter ran through the mob. Then came a sharp word of command:
"Unload!"
As with one movement his party of constables were on the ground and
lined up in front of their cars, with their clubs and axe handles
ready for service. Still the mob waited in ominous silence. The
Chief drew his gun and said in a loud, clear voice:
"I am going to clear away this barricade. The first man that
offers to prevent me I shall shoot on the spot."
"I wouldn't do that, Chief," said a voice quietly from the rear.
"There are others, you know. Listen."
Three shots rang out in rapid succession, and again silence fell.
Meantime from the corner of the barricade a man had been peering
into the cars.
"Boys!" he shouted. "They ain't there! There ain't no scabs."
The Chief laughed quietly.
"Who said there were?" he asked.
"Sold, by thunder!" said the man. Then he yelled: "We'll get 'em
yet. Come on, boys, to the main street."
Like a deer, he doubled down a side street, followed by the crowd,
yelling, cursing, swearing deep oaths.
"Let 'em go," said the Chief. "Maitland's got through by this
time." As he spoke, two shots rang out, followed by the crash of
glass, and the headlights of the first car went black.
"Just as well you didn't get through, Chief," said the voice of the
previous speaker. "Might've got hurt, eh?"
"Give it to him, Chief," said Rupert savagely.
"No use," said the Chief. "Let him go."
Meanwhile, Maitland, with little or no opposition, had got his cars
through the crowd, which as a matter of fact were unaware of the
identity of the party until after they had broken through.
Their way led by a circuitous route through quiet back streets,
approaching Police Headquarters from the rear. A ten-minute run
brought them to a short side street which led past the Maitland
Mills, at the entrance to which they saw under the glare of the arc
lights over the gateway a crowd blocking their way.
"Now, what in thunder is this? Hold up a minute," said Maitland to
his driver. "Let me take a look." He ran forward to the main
entrance. There he found the gateway, which stood a little above
the street level, blocked by a number of his own men, some of whom
he recognised as members of his hockey team, and among them,
McNish. Out in the street among the crowd stood Simmons, standing
on a barrel, lashing himself into a frenzy and demanding blood,
fire, revolution, and what not.
"McNish, you here?" said Maitland sharply. "What is it, peace or
war? Speak quick!"
"A'm haudden these fules back fra the mill," answered McNish with
a scowl. Then, dropping into his book English, he continued
bitterly: "They have done enough to-night already. They have
wrecked our cause for us!"
"You are dead right, McNish," answered Maitland. "And what do they
want here?"
"They are some of McGinnis's men and they are mad at the way you
handled them over yonder. They are bound to get in here. They are
only waiting for the rest of the crowd. Yon eejit doesn't know
what he is saying. They are all half-drunk."
Maitland's mind worked swiftly. "McNish, listen!" he said. "I am
in a deuce of a fix. I have the scabs in those cars there with me.
The crowd are following me up. What shall I do?"
"My God, man, you're lost. They'll tear ye tae bits."
"McNish, listen. I'll run them into the office by the side gate
down the street. Keep them busy here. Let that fool Simmons spout
all he wants. He'll help to make a row."
His eyes fell upon a crouching figure at his feet.
"Who is this? It's Sam, by all that's holy! Why, Sam, you are the
very chap I want. Listen, boy. Slip around to the side door and
open it wide till I bring in some cars. Then shut and bar it
quick." Carefully he repeated his instructions. "Can you do it,
Sam?"
"I'm awful scared, Captain," replied the boy, his teeth chattering,
"but I'll try it."
"Good boy," said Maitland. "Don't fail me, Sam. They might kill
me."
"All right, Captain. I'll do it!" And Sam disappeared, crawling
under the gate, while Maitland slipped back to his cars and passed
the word among the drivers. "Keep close up and stop for nothing!"
They had almost made the entry when some man hanging on the rear of
the crowd caught sight of them.
"Scabs! Scabs!" cried the man, dashing after the cars. But Sam
was equal to his task, and as the last car passed through the
gateway he slammed and bolted the door in their faces.
Disposing of the strike-breakers in the office, Maitland and his
guard of specials passed outside to the main gate and took their
places beside McNish and his guard. Before them the mob had become
a mad, yelling, frenzied thing, bereft of power of thought, swaying
under the fury of their passion like tree tops blown by storm,
reiterating in hoarse and broken cries the single word "Scabs!
Scabs!"
"Keep them going somehow, McNish," said Maitland. "The Chief won't
be long now."
McNish climbed up upon the fence and, held in place there by two
specials, lifted his hand for silence. But Simmons, who all too
obviously had fallen under the spell of the bootleggers, knew too
well the peril of his cause. Shrill and savage rose his voice:
"Don't listen to 'im. 'E's a traitor, a blank and double-blank
traitor. 'E sold us (h)up, 'e 'as. Don't listen to 'im."
Like a maniac he spat out the words from his foam-flecked lips,
waving his arms madly about his head. Relief came from an
unexpected source. Sam Wigglesworth, annoyed at Simmons's
persistence and observing that McNish, to whom as a labour leader
he felt himself bound, regarded the orating and gesticulating
Simmons with disfavour, reached down and, pulling a sizable club
from beneath the bottom of a fence, took careful aim and, with the
accuracy of the baseball pitcher that he was, hurled it at the
swaying figure upon the barrel. The club caught Simmons fair in
the mouth, who, being, none too firmly set upon his pedestal,
itself affording a wobbling foothold, landed spatting and swearing
in the arms of his friends below. With the mercurial temper
characteristic of a crowd, they burst into a yell of laughter.
"Go to it now, McNish!" said Maitland.
Echoing the laughter, McNish once more held up his hand. "Earth to
earth, ashes to ashes," he said in his deepest and most solemn
tone. The phenomenal absurdity of a joke from the solemn Scotchman
again tickled the uncertain temperament of the crowd into
boisterous laughter.
"Men, listen tae me!" cried McNish. "Ye mad a bad mistake the
nicht. In fact, ye're a lot of fules. And those who led ye are
worse, for they have lost us the strike, if that is any
satisfaction tae ye. And now ye want to do another fule thing.
Ye're mad just because ye didn't know enough to keep out of the
wet."
But at this point, a man fighting his way from the rear of the
crowd, once more raised the cry "Scabs!"
"Keep that fool quiet," said McNish sharply.
"Keep quiet yourself, McNish," replied the man, still pushing his
way toward the front.
"Heaven help us now," said Maitland. "It's Tony, and drunk at
that!"
It was indeed Tony, without hat, coat or vest.
"McNish, we want those scabs," said Tony, in drunken gravity.
"There are nae scabs here. Haud ye're drunken tongue," said McNish
savagely.
"McNish," persisted Tony in a grave and perfectly courteous tone,
"you're a liar. The scabs are in that office." A roar again swept
the crowd.
"Men, listen to me," pleaded McNish. "A'll tell ye about the
scabs. They are in the office yonder. But I have Captain
Maitland's word o' honour that they will be shipped out of town
by the first train."
A savage yell answered him.
"McNish, we'll do the shipping," said Tony, moving still nearer the
speaker.
"Officer," said Maitland sharply to a uniformed policeman standing
by his side, "arrest that man!" pointing to Tony.
The policeman drew his baton, took two strides forward, seized Tony
by the back of the neck and drew him in. An angry yell went up
from the mob. Maitland felt a hand upon his arm. Looking down, he
saw to his horror and dismay Annette, her face white and stricken
with grief and terror.
"Oh, Jack," she pleaded, "don't let Tony be arrested. He broke
away from us. Let me take him. He will come with me. Oh, let me
take him!"
"Rescue! Rescue!" shouted the crowd, rushing the cordon of police
lining the street.
"Kill him! Kill the traitor!" yelled Simmons, struggling through
and waving unsteadily the revolver in his hand. "Down with that
tyrant, Maitland! Kill him!" he shrieked.
He raised his arm, holding his gun with both hands.
"Look out, Jack," shrieked Annette, flinging herself on him.
Simultaneously with the shot, a woman's scream rang out and Annette
fell back into Maitland's arms. A silence deep as death fell upon
the mob.
With a groan McNish dropped from the fence beside the girl.
Annette opened her eyes and, looking up into Maitland's face,
whispered: "He didn't get you, Jack. I'm so glad."
"Oh, Annette, dear girl! He's killed you!"
"It's--all--right--Jack," she whispered. "I--saved--you."
Meanwhile McNish, with her hand caught in his, was sobbing: "God,
have mercy! She's deed! She's deed!"
Annette again opened her eyes. "Poor Malcolm," she whispered.
"Dear Malcolm." Then, closing her eyes again, quietly as a tired
child, she sank into unconsciousness. The big Scotchman, still
kissing her hand, sobbed:
"Puir lassie, puir lassie! Ma God! Ma God! What now? What now?"
"She is dead. The girl is dead." The word passed from lip to lip
among the crowd, which still held motionless and silent.
"We'll get her into the office," said Maitland.
"A'll tak her," said McNish, and, stopping down, he lifted her
tenderly in his arms, stood for a moment facing the crowd, and then
in a voice of unutterable sadness that told of a broken heart, he
said: "Ye've killed her. Ye've killed the puir lassie. Are ye
content?" And passed in through the gate, holding the motionless
form close to his heart.
As he passed with his pathetic burden, the men on guard at the gate
bared their heads. Immediately on every hand throughout the crowd
men took off their hats and stood silent till he had disappeared
from their sight. In the presence of that poignant grief their
rage against him ceased, swept out of their hearts by an
overwhelming pity.
In one swift instant a door had opened from another and unknown
world, and through the open door a Presence, majestic, imperious,
had moved in upon them, withering with His icy breath their hot
passions, smiting their noisy clamour to guilty silence.