<div><h2 class='c010'>CHAPTER V</h2></div>
<p class='c006' >Otto Littman was quite right in thinking
that Reuben Cowder would not write his daughter
about their quarrel. People might say what
they would of Reuben Cowder’s business methods, but
he never hit below the belt. Moreover, he was too
wise to attempt to influence the likes or dislikes of his
spirited daughter. He had too great faith in the
soundness of her instincts. However deeply she might
be interested in Otto—and he feared it was deep indeed—he
was confident that she would instinctively
know whether he was loyal; and, of course, while she
was in Serbia, there was no danger. He was quite
right. Nancy was reading between the lines of Otto
Littman’s letters, and sensing far better than any one
in Sabinsport the motives which had involved him in
the German intriguing. Besides, she was wholly occupied
with her work.</p>
<p class='c007' >Dick realized, better even than Reuben Cowder,
how the sorrows that she had undertaken to relieve
absorbed her. He was getting better and better acquainted
with the young woman in these days, for it
came to be Reuben Cowder’s habit, since his first talk
with Dick, to bring him regularly her letters. Sometimes
he dropped into Dick’s study at night, sometimes
he picked him up as he drove by in his car or stopped
him as he met him on the street; and always Dick found
that his reason was the need he had of talking about his
girl. Evidently he talked to no one else, for nobody
in Sabinsport knew any of the details of the terrible experiences
these months had brought Nancy Cowder or
anything of the hell of torment her father had gone
through. Dick himself never mentioned her name,
sensing that, at the first hint the hard old man had
that he had talked, his confidence would be silenced.
Reuben Cowder had a terrible resentment against Sabinsport
society because it misjudged his daughter.
Sabinsport should never know of her from him, should
not have the stupid satisfaction of rolling over her
splendid service with idle tongue, and Sabinsport did
not know more than that the girl had been in Serbia
throughout the bitter months after the second invasion
and repulse.</p>
<p class='c007' >Dick knew the tragic story in spots, and, by his
knowledge of the country and his careful reading of
every scrap of news the leading journals of the world
gave him, had pieced it into a whole. He saved every
item he read to talk over with Cowder, and every day
that he built up the story he unconsciously became more
deeply involved. “The courage of the creature,” he
said to himself; “the gentleness, the gayety, the pity—why,
she’s a wonder woman. Who could have guessed
it from the gossip of this benighted town?”</p>
<p class='c007' >And as a truth, Nancy Cowder deserved all Dick was
attributing to her. She was showing the qualities of a
great, pitying, resourceful soul, naturally and quietly
giving its life to ease the boundless misery of a brave
and neglected little people.</p>
<p class='c007' >She had first entered the country in 1914, stirred to
the undertaking by the reports of the plight of the sick
and wounded after the Austro-Hungarian invasions.
Things in Serbia, indeed, were in a frightful way. Exhausted
by two recent wars, her hospitals, never many,
stripped of supplies, her few physicians and nurses
worn out by the long strain through which they had
been going, the country could scarce have been in a
worse condition to stand a new shock. She, to be sure,
repulsed her enemy, but the repulse cost a frightful
price of dead and mutilated. Who shall ever have the
courage to tell of the savage cruelties that attended the
retreat of the Austro-Hungarian army from Serbia in
the fall of 1914? Those who followed after found
men hanging in orchards, dead; women huddled in
heaps where they’d been felled, the hideous first step
in that decision to exterminate the Serbian people,
which the Central Empires had taken.</p>
<p class='c007' >It was a heart-breaking story that reached Nancy
Cowder from an English official summoned home by
the war. Her decision was immediate: “I’ll go,
there is need there. All the world will care for Belgium,”
and for a month she worked with her English
friend, Betty Barstow, to get together a unit of a half-dozen
women. The result was two physicians, two
nurses, one chauffeur and one “general utility man,” as
Nancy called herself. They moved heaven and earth
to raise money, collect supplies and secure such recognition
from the English and French governments as
would give their unofficial and volunteer caravan a
standing before the Serbian authorities. They had
little need of passports. A woman with surgical
dressings in one hand and food in the other was welcomed
as an angel from heaven by Serbians in those
stricken days.</p>
<p class='c007' >Nancy’s party had gone into the country by Salonika,
a city overflowing with the excited travelers of half the
world. From there they had made their way to Valievo,
a little town north of the center of Serbia, the
terminus of a narrow gauge railroad which runs eastward
connecting with the main line between Salonika
and Belgrade. It was over this single track, with its
dwarf engine and cars, that the soldiery of all Central
Serbia was traveling—with their supplies, their
wounded and their sick. Since the terrific fighting
along the Save and the Dwina, wounded Serbs and
Austrians had been pouring into Valievo. Refugees
had followed them. The little narrow-gauge railroad
could not cope with this mass of misery. It had carried
away what it could but numbers had been left behind.</p>
<p class='c007' >Late in 1914 these six young and intrepid Samaritans
arrived with bags, boxes of bandages, cordials and medicines—and
more to follow. They had planned to
find a little house on one of the green hillsides, to make
it a home, and from there to go day by day among the
people; and thus they started.</p>
<p class='c007' >The little house was not hard to find. It looked out
over the valley with its red-tiled roof and its suggestion
of a distant time when the Turks were in the country
as conquerors and built houses with overhanging eaves
and trellised windows. It was from this little house
that they started out for their work in what was then
one of the most pitiable spots of all the many—oh, so
many—on an earth which lifts a friendly face to man
and begs of him to take of its fruits in peace and in
content.</p>
<p class='c007' >Their first day’s work had brought them back, white
and anguished. What were they in all this thing? It
was sweeping back the waves of the sea with a broom,
dipping it dry with a teaspoon, as they told one another.
And so, indeed, it seemed at first sight. Valievo was
one big hospital—its schoolrooms, public halls,
churches, cafés, had been turned into wards—and such
wards! The only beds were piles of straw on the floor.
The only utensils the helter-skelter articles the doctors
and nurses could pick up. And to meet this misery,
there were just six doctors! Everything that they
could do they had done to bring something like order
and cleanliness into the situation, but it was a task
manifold beyond the most tremendous effort of which
they were capable. Hundreds of wounded men lay for
days on their straw beds unattended save for some
rude first aid—and always lumbering ox-carts were
jolting over the cobbled streets bringing from the hills
more and more victims.</p>
<p class='c007' >The condition was so shocking that Nancy and her
friends cringed in horror at the sights and in despair
at their own inadequacy. Yet what they could do they
would. From daylight to dark they went from one
group to another, cleansing and dressing wounds,
changing straw often stiff with blood and filth, fumigating
garments, letting in fresh air, furnishing nourishing
food, doing a thousand little things to improve the
conditions and to simplify the care of the stricken
groups.</p>
<p class='c007' >Regularly every week Nancy Cowder had written
her father and she had taken always the greatest care
possible that the letters got out. More than once she
had sent a messenger with them to Nish or Belgrade.
Because of this precaution, he had received with fair
regularity news of her life and health for the past
twelve months—and such wonderful letters as she
wrote; the first appalled cry at the suffering—suffering
so out of proportion to their puny efforts—was never
repeated. The girl had plunged into steady work, and
it was of what they did that she wrote—letters often
actually gay in their triumph over their difficulties.
They had not, to begin with, the commonest articles;
basins, bed clothing, shirts. It took the most determined
and continued efforts to supply themselves, but
they never were discouraged, never downcast.</p>
<p class='c007' >“Oh, Father, if you knew what we do without.
Nothing matters, we know, if we can keep them clean
and warm and fed. Straw on the floor doesn’t matter—sheets
don’t matter, spoons and bowls don’t matter.
It takes so little if the little is right. We wage one
long campaign to get things. I never knew how
wonderful money is before. You mustn’t mind if I spend
a great deal—if I overdraw—if I cut into my principal.
There couldn’t be a better use for it. If it all
goes I can work. Why, I could earn my living as a
hospital orderly now, Father. You ought to see what
I can do—what I do do. I sweep floors and change
straw. I cook and clean and drive nails. I’ve made
what we call bedsteads with my own hands—and
proud of it! I never knew that work—work with
one’s hands—could be so good. I feel as if I’d just
begun to live. What a pity that it takes a <i>war</i> to teach
idlers like me where the essence of life is found!</p>
<p class='c007' >“Don’t you worry, dear. I shall come back to you
another person, and I shall know when I get there how
much of real life there is to be had in Sabinsport.”</p>
<p class='c007' >“I don’t understand,” said Reuben Cowder.</p>
<p class='c007' >“I do,” said Dick.</p>
<p class='c007' >“If she will only come back!” groaned Reuben
Cowder.</p>
<p class='c007' >“She will,” said Dick.</p>
<p class='c007' >“And be happy here! How can she be?”</p>
<p class='c007' >“She’s discovering Sabinsport in Serbia,” said Dick.</p>
<p class='c007' >“She can have all the money I have,” said Reuben
Cowder.</p>
<p class='c007' >“You couldn’t do better with it,” said Dick.</p>
<p class='c007' >Week by week the two men followed the work of
the intrepid group. Nancy was exultant over so many
things! The redemption of a forsaken church on a
hillside turned into a perfectly good sanitarium for
convalescents. “It has no windows left, so we do
have air. The only way you get it in Serbia.”</p>
<p class='c007' >The wonderful help they were getting from the
wounded who were able to get about—Austrian and
Serbian—who built them incinerators, mended leaking
roofs, brought wood for their fireplaces, scrubbed and
cooked and even sewed. “We have a class in
mattress making—such a funny, funny class. There’s a
poor one-legged Austrian with a cough which will carry
him off soon, once an upholsterer in Vienna. He has
taught us all here to make strong, comfortable mattresses.
I went myself to Nish and brought all the ticking
and needles and thread I could find.”</p>
<p class='c007' >The feat over which Nancy crowed most, to which
she was always coming back, was the Water Works.
She always capitalized the words: “You can imagine,
Father dear, how we’ve been handicapped for water.
After our first week we never gave our patients a drink
that had not been boiled at the house. We hired a
stout peasant woman—there were no men to be had—to
carry it—two buckets full on an ox-yoke! She
followed us from place to place. We did our best to
make the sick understand how dangerous it was to drink
the dreadful water used in Valievo. We didn’t succeed
very well, though some of them would do almost
anything to please us. When we took over the old
church we were put to it for water at first. It had to be
carried for nearly a mile. Then, oh, Happy Day, Dr.
Helen and I made up our minds there must be water
above us somewhere and we’d find it and pipe it down.
We found a perfectly good, bubbling spring, grown
about with willows. We paid the owner of the land
his price for the water and I, Father, <i>I</i>, your spoiled,
useless daughter, stood over three crippled Serbians
while they cleaned and walled that spring and I, <i>I</i>
taught them how to make a trough of boards to bring it
to the house. At least I began by making myself a
joint of the wooden trough we used to see at home and
when they understood they made something far better.
Now it flows, cold and sweet and clear into the sanitarium.
I’m just crazy over it.”</p>
<p class='c007' >Nothing stirred Dick or alarmed Reuben Cowder
more than the long fight with typhus, which began late
in the year in Serbia—and lasted through the winter.
It was not at first realized that the peculiar form of the
disease which ravaged the country was carried by body
lice, but where it was known, the war on the pests which
the unit had always waged took on a fury and an ingenuity
worthy of the enemy. It was war, war, war.
The girls shaved, sulphurized and burned from morning
until night. They isolated the incoming, they so
frightened their patients by their horror at a single
beastie that it came to be a shame and a crime to be
caught with one. And they conquered. And with the
conquest typhus slowly retired from every spot in which
they ruled. Nancy was jubilant.</p>
<p class='c007' >“We’ve met the enemy and they are ours. We have
a new National Anthem and we sing it daily. Don’t
tell it to the Sabinsport Woman’s Club. It would
swoon with shock—but, oh Father, if you’d seen what
we have seen—if you had known the cause and if you
had labored and sweat day and night for weeks to remove
that cause, you would understand why we sing
what we do. The words came to us from the Berry
unit over the mountain where they, too, have fought
and won—indeed from them we learned the danger
and the way to meet it. Now take our National Anthem
straight, Father:</p>
<div class='lg-container-b'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>“There are no lice on us,</div>
<div class='line'>There are no lice on us,</div>
<div class='line in2'>No lice on us.</div>
<div class='line'>There may be one or two</div>
<div class='line'>Great big fat lice on you,</div>
<div class='line in2'><span class='sc'>No lice on us</span>.”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007' >Reuben Cowder read that to Dick with tears running
down his cheeks.</p>
<p class='c007' >“My little Nancy,” he said.</p>
<p class='c007' >“She’s a brave lady,” said Dick.</p>
<p class='c007' >The spring and summer came and went. The letters
were unfailingly cheerful. They had settled down
to work. With the end of the fighting and the conquest
of typhus their life was more like that of a normal hospital.
If primitive, it was sufficient. There was but
one exciting episode. It came in one of the spring letters.</p>
<p class='c007' >“A curious thing has happened, Father; one of the
strange meetings this war is continually bringing about.
A week ago an ox-cart drove in from the north with a
Serbian wounded months ago—his leg had been amputated—sawed
off. He had had no care in the winter.
He had had typhus somewhere back in the mountains.
Friendly peasants had tried to take care of him, but he
was in a terrible shape—no flesh—just a spark of life
left. They brought him finally to us—and we did our
best of course. It’s strange what a fury to save seizes
you when a poor shattered thing like this is put into your
hands. You fight and fight—and won’t give in, and
we won with this man, but I don’t believe we would if
he had not been so determined to live. He whispered
it to one of the girls, speaking for the first time days
after he came, whispered in perfectly good English, ‘I
must live.’ She almost turned his broth over him
she was so surprised. It was strange to us to find one
like that. Most of them are so done they don’t help—just
lie staring, waiting to die, and only asking not to
be touched. I have seen my dogs look at me as they do
when they were dying. Their eyes always beg that you
let them die in peace.</p>
<p class='c007' >“Well, he grew stronger, and when he was able to
keep his eyes open they never left me when I was in the
ward. I knew there was something he wanted to say
but was too weak, or perhaps his poor head was not
yet quite clear. It was as if he knew me. And that
was it, Father. He did.</p>
<p class='c007' >“One day when he was better he called me.
‘America?’ he said.</p>
<p class='c007' >“‘Yes,’ I told him.</p>
<p class='c007' >“‘Sabinsport?’</p>
<p class='c007' >“‘What!’ I cried, ‘you know Sabinsport?’</p>
<p class='c007' >“‘Yes—my wife, children there, Miss Cowder?’</p>
<p class='c007' >“‘How do you know?’</p>
<p class='c007' >“‘I saw you once, at the Emma.’</p>
<p class='c007' >“He has been <i>my</i> patient from that hour, and if I
never do another thing in Siberia I mean to get him on
his feet and take him back to Sabinsport. As soon as
you get this, cable if his family is there and well. It
will help so. His name is Nikola Petrovitch.”</p>
<p class='c007' >Reuben Cowder hurried the letter to Dick. “You
know the man, what about his family?”</p>
<p class='c007' >“Living where he left them—well—and if they
know he’s alive, happy. It’s been months since they’ve
had news. Stana had almost lost hope. This will be
wine to her. May I tell her Miss Cowder is nursing
him?”</p>
<p class='c007' >The old man gulped. “I suppose,” he said, “it
would give her more hope. If you don’t mind, I’ll go
out with you. If Nancy has adopted Nikola, I guess
I’ll take the family.” And so, for the first time in his
life, Reuben Cowder entered the house of a miner,
bringing glad news and honest sympathy.</p>
<p class='c007' >The summer of 1915 came and passed slowly.
News came regularly. Nikola was gaining strength,
was sitting up; they had made him crutches, he was
learning to walk; and then, in September, that which
gladdened Reuben Cowder’s sore heart as he had not
believed it ever again would be gladdened—Nikola
could take care of himself now. Nancy really needed
a rest, and they were all insisting she take it. They
would leave Serbia as early as possible in October,
couldn’t Reuben Cowder meet then in London? They
would cable when they reached Salonika, and he would
have ample time.</p>
<p class='c007' >It was wonderful to Dick to see the change in the
man with the coming of the news. His silent tongue
was loosened. For the first time in their lives, his business
friends heard him talk freely of his daughter.
For the first time Sabinsport learned in details of what
Nancy Cowder had been doing, for when the seal he
had put on his lips was broken by Reuben Cowder’s
change of heart, Dick told both Patsy and Mary Sabins
the story, omitting no heroic touch and cunningly enlarging
on two widely separated details—the romantic
discovery, cure and expected return of Nikola Petrovitch
and the continued support of Nancy’s unit by
Lady Barstow and her circle!</p>
<p class='c007' >The story was quickly set loose, as Dick had expected
it to be. The Woman’s Club, the War Board, all
High Town seized it as one more personal connection
with the Great War. It is safe to say that the location
of Serbia on the map of Europe had never been known
to the tenth of one per cent, of Sabinsport up to the day
that Dick confided the adventures of Nancy Cowder in
that land to Patsy McCullon and Mary Sabins; but
before a week had passed the library had it penciled in
blue on a fresh outline map, with Valievo marked probably
within fifty miles of the true location, but quite as
exact as the maps which amateur cartographers of the
press were publishing; the Woman’s Club had engaged
a lecturer to tell it what he knew of Serbia; a subscription
had been started, and in the alley on the South
Side Jimmy Flannigan’s goat had been harnessed to
Benny Katz’ two-wheeled cart, and Reuben Cowder,
coming through as usual, found the gang in white
paper caps, marked with a crayon red cross, receiving
Nick Brown who, limp and groaning, was impersonating
Nikola Petrovitch’s first appearance at the Valievo
sanitarium. Here again it was Jimmy Flannigan’s big
brother who, listening to Patsy at high school, had inspired
the play.</p>
<p class='c007' >The keenest interest was taken in Reuben Cowder’s
trip—for of course he was going. He was settling
things for as long an absence as necessary, doing it feverishly,
joyfully—he who had always stuck night and
day at his post and grumbled at every business trip that
he could not escape. He would be ready to start as
soon as the cablegram came; Nancy had said early in
October.</p>
<p class='c007' >But October came. The first week passed—and
no cablegram. The second week, and none. And
then there fell on Reuben Cowder with crushing force
the news of the second invasion of Serbia. From north
and west came the Austro-Hungarians—from the west
the Bulgars—hordes of them. This time there was
to be no mistake. Serbia was not merely to be conquered;
she was to be crushed, and the remnants swept
into the sea.</p>
<p class='c007' >The suddenness, the mass, the extent of the attack,
left no doubt in Reuben Cowder’s mind that whatever
Serbia’s fate might be—and that was as nothing to
him—Nancy had been trapped. Unless she had
reached Salonika before the advance, she’d have hardly
a shadow of a chance. And he told himself, too, that
if she saw need, she would not leave. His forebodings
were so black that Dick urged him to go at once to London,
as he had planned, not waiting for a cablegram:
“I will send it when it comes. You’ll be there to greet
her when she does get out. If she doesn’t come, try
to arrange to go to Serbia yourself.”</p>
<p class='c007' >And it was on this advice that late in the month Reuben
Cowder acted. Before sailing, he had in Washington
used every official channel to get information of his
daughter, but to no avail. When it seemed certain
that for the time being—and he was everywhere assured
it was only for “the time being”—that he could
not get news, he sailed, having first made elaborate
arrangements with Dick about informing him if anything
was heard.</p>
<p class='c007' >By the time he reached London, the completeness of
the disaster to Serbia was known. Her armies had
been defeated on every side—they, and practically the
entire population, were in retreat; had embarked for
Corfu. For the moment the little island held the only
organized remnant of the Serbian nation.</p>
<p class='c007' >From time to time news came of this or that group
of nurses or doctors who had joined the retreat, had
been taken prisoner, or on their own had reached safety;
but Reuben Cowder could get no clew to Nancy’s
whereabouts, though he worked day and night, interviewing
every returning soldier or civilian of whom he
heard, sending agents to Salonika and to Corfu to
search. It was not until the opening of the year 1916
that news came to him that he trusted. This was when
three of his daughter’s companions in the Serbian unit
reached London. They brought him the first trustworthy
report of what had happened to Nancy when
the invasion began, and while they could give no assurance
that she was still living they at least left him the
hope that this might be true. How improbable the
girls felt this to be, they took care not to let the distracted
man know.</p>
<p class='c007' >Their story, so far as it interested Reuben Cowder,
was soon told. The approach of the Austro-Hungarians
from the north and the Bulgars from the west had
begun the middle of October. The Serbians, who,
through the months since the first invasion, had been
accumulating stores and preparing for a second attack,
welcomed the enemy, confident of their ability to drive
him back. Their confidence was quickly destroyed.
The mass thrown against them was overpowering.
Nish was taken early in November by the Bulgars,
while by the middle of the month the army from the
north was sweeping Valievo. Nancy’s unit, unable to
believe that they were in danger and unwilling to desert
now that every day was multiplying the wounded, remained
at their posts until the population was ordered
out.</p>
<p class='c007' >They quickly determined not to abandon the fleeing
people. They would go with them, a traveling unit.
Two great ox carts were secured, and their stores and
a few of the most helpless patients loaded into them.
Two native women who had become particularly useful
were taken, and thus equipped these dauntless young
women voluntarily threw themselves into the great
river of Serbs flowing southward.</p>
<p class='c007' >Of the terrors and hardships of that journey the girls
passed over lightly. It was needless to torture Nancy
Cowder’s father, they felt. They told him only that a
week after they started Nancy had become separated
from them, that Nikola Petrovitch and one of their
Serbian women attendants were with her at the time,
and that as they were in a part of the country well
known to both of them, they, in all probability, finding
it impossible to overtake their own party in the rush
and confusion of the fleeing mob, had sought to find a
way out by another route, or had taken refuge in some
mountain farm or village known to Nikola and unlikely
to be reached by the enemy troops. This was the most
hopeful thing they could tell him, and they made the
most of the possibility, assuring him again and again
that Nikola, although on crutches, was now strong and
so good a mountaineer and so devoted to Nancy that
he surely would find a place of safety for her. It was
a slim hope—but it was a hope.</p>
<p class='c007' >If the girls had had the courage to tell Reuben
Cowder the truth about their parting with Nancy, he probably
would have held the hope that she had escaped as
lightly as they did; but that they could not do. They
urged him, more for his own sake than for hers, to go
himself to Corfu or Salonika, and arrange for a search
party of Serbians familiar with the western mountains.
This would at least occupy him. And so, early in January,
1916, he left London.</p>
<p class='c007' >Armed with every conceivable passport and credential
that sympathetic friends and officials could provide,
he made straight for Durazzo,—the Albanian port
held then by the Italians—the port from which so
many of the refugees had been transferred to Corfu, to
Corsica, and to Italy. It seemed to him sometimes on
his journey that he was following a call. “Durazzo!—Durazzo!”—rang
in his ears, whispered itself to
him in his sleep.</p>
<p class='c007' >So impelling was his conviction that he must at once
get there that all contrary counsels, whatever their
source, left him unmoved, and so to Durazzo he went,
arriving the third week of the month. The Austro-Hungarians
were already in Albania; they had taken
ports to the north. It looked very much as if Reuben
Cowder had arrived only in time to witness the Italian
evacuation.</p>
<p class='c007' >Searching for a lost one in that confusion was heart-breaking
work. What was one woman among the
thousands lost and dead in that horrible flight before
the advancing army! The valleys, the hillsides, the
crannies of the mountain on the route that they had
traveled, were filled with hideous proofs of the anguish
and death that marked the escape of the Serbians.
Fully half of the army and of the civilian hordes that
followed it were scattered or dead. Durazzo had
been filled for weeks with the laments of those who
sought fathers, mothers, husbands, wives, children—and
never found them.</p>
<p class='c007' >When he told the officials all he knew of Nancy since
she left Valievo in November, he was assured that
there was not a chance in a hundred—one despairing
official said a thousand—that she was alive.</p>
<p class='c007' >True, she might have gone through with some group
which had reached Corfu or Corsica or Italy, but the
probabilities were that in that case she would have cabled.
It was not likely that she was alive if she had
fallen behind. True, she might be concealed in some
mountain hamlet, but no searching party was possible
under any auspices now. “You would have to bring
over an American army to protect you, and I understand
you Americans are too proud to fight,” one bitter,
over-worked Italian Red Cross official flung at him.
In all his determined, well-ordered, effective life, Reuben
Cowder had never experienced before what he
acknowledged to be a hopeless situation. This was
hopeless.</p>
<p class='c007' >He had followed a call. It had led him to Durazzo,
and now, as if to mock his faith, he saw the enemy ready
to sweep him into the sea as it had the people his daughter
had befriended, and for whom he was willing to say
now that she had died.</p>
<p class='c007' >And then the impossible happened. Three days
after his arrival, a Red Cross official, who had been
particularly interested in his case, hastily summoned
him to headquarters. A party of five men and two
women, disguised as Albanian peasants, had just
reached Durazzo. Such groups were common in those
days. One of the men in this party—a man on
crutches, a Serbian, claimed that a woman whom they
carried with them in a rude hammock was an American.
He had begged them to cable at once to Reuben Cowder
of Sabinsport, U. S. A., telling him his daughter was
alive. He had asked for a nurse, and one had been
sent to their lodgings. The Serbian had not been told
that the man whom he sought was in all probability at
that moment in Durazzo.</p>
<p class='c007' >The Red Cross official said he felt certain, from the
passports and papers that the man carried, there could
be no doubt of the identity of the woman, but he did not
want to raise any false hopes. Mr. Cowder must
await the nurse’s report before trying to see the girl.
If she were as weak as the Serbian claimed, the shock
of seeing him might be bad for her. A guide would
conduct him to her lodgings. And this arranged, the
over-worked, horror-fed, shock-proof Red Cross unit
stopped for an instant to wonder and to rejoice over the
amazing incident, and then turned back again to snatch
what human drift it could from the flood of misery flowing
through its hands, never again even to remember
the names of the father and daughter so miraculously
reunited.</p>
<p class='c007' >Reuben Cowder never knew how he reached the
wretched inn in which the little party had found shelter.
Seeing him reeling and running through the street, one
might have thought him demented, but dementia was
too familiar in Durazzo in those days to cause remark.
Nikola Petrovitch, meeting him at the door, shrank
from his outstretched hands as if they were those of a
ghost. In all his imaginings of what might happen to
hasten the day when he could put his precious charge
still alive into her father’s care, he had never dreamed
of this. Reuben Cowder here! Shaking his hands—begging
for the truth—Was Nancy alive? Could
he see her?</p>
<p class='c007' >Nikola Petrovitch had no squeamish notions about
joy killing; also he knew better than nurse or doctor the
spirit and the courage of the woman for whose life he
had dared every danger that nature and man in their
most murderous moods devise. He took Reuben Cowder
by the hand and led him straight into the narrow
stone-floored chamber where Nancy Cowder lay, and
he took the astonished nurse by the arm and led her out.
He was right, for a half hour later, when Reuben Cowder
called back the nurse, the first color that had tinged
the girl’s cheeks in weeks was on them, and every day
that followed, in spite of the difficulties and dangers in
getting away from Durazzo, and the discomforts of the
passage across the Adriatic on the crowded steamer,
Nancy Cowder grew stronger. She would get well,
she told her father confidently. These brave people
who had brought her safe to Durazzo should not have
risked themselves for nothing. And as for her father,
never, never again would she leave him.</p>
<p class='c007' >But getting well was to be a slow, slow process.
They took her to a nook in the French Mediterranean,
and there for months she lay, regaining little by little
her all but exhausted vitality. Reuben Cowder stayed
at her side, and Nikola Petrovitch was sent back to
Sabinsport and to his family.</p>
<p class='c007' >It was from Nikola that Sabinsport learned more of
the heroism of Nancy and the devotion of her Serbian
rescuers than Reuben Cowder himself ever knew.
Her parting with her friends had not been an accident,
as they had led him to believe. It had been a chance
deliberately taken by Nikola when Nancy, worn out by
her long year’s work, had totally collapsed after a few
days of the terrible sights and hardships of the retreat.
They had found her one morning burning with fever
and babbling nonsense. It was then that Nikola had
asserted himself. Give him a bullock and a cart and
the food they could spare, send one of the Serbian
women with him, and he would take her to a place he
knew in the mountains which the Austrians would never
find. When she was fit to move he would get her to a
seaport or send her father word how to find her. And
the group of terrified girls, knowing that death was
almost certain in the rout in which they found themselves,
believing this a chance, consented, yet in their
hearts they never thought to see her again.</p>
<p class='c007' >There was more hope of escape in Nikola’s undertaking
than they had realized. Already the Serbian
soldiers had begun to break into bands, seeking hiding
places little likely to be disturbed for months at least,
and it was one of these bands that, coming on Nikola
and his charges two days after they had started into the
mountains, volunteered to act as a guard.</p>
<p class='c007' >No one ever will know with what tenderness and devotion
these rough soldiers, flying for their lives, cared
for the delirious girl. The cart had to be abandoned,
but from the coarse blankets they carried they rigged
up a rough hammock, and for days took turns in carrying
it. The spot they sought, and finally reached, was
a tiny hamlet, hidden in a cleft of a mountain—a
group of huts, a few women and children, a few goats
and bullocks and sheep—all huddled together for the
winter. They only too gladly welcomed the party, for
if they brought tragic news, the soldiers had stout
hearts and willing hands, and put hope again into the
abandoned groups.</p>
<p class='c007' >The guest house of the Zadruga, the one important
family in the hamlet, was set aside for Nancy, and into
it went every comfort that the community afforded—their
homespun rugs, their homespun “tchilms”—hangings,
some of which would have done credit to a
Persian weaver—covered the walls. Homespun linen
furnished her bed, native embroideries were spread
over every piece of furniture. She had been an angel
of mercy to their men; she had left her home to aid
them—all they had was here.</p>
<p class='c007' >The Serbian woman had learned in the months at
Valievo that in the opinion of English and Americans
at least, fresh air, warmth and cleanliness were essential
if the sick were to recover, and in spite of the protestations
of the inhabitants in regard to air she saw to
it, with almost religious zeal, that Nancy had all three.
Great goat skins made her a soft, warm bed; a roaring
fire burned day and night in the fireplace; and on the
hearth there was always a big jar of hot water.</p>
<p class='c007' >After many days of fever and delirium, the girl began
to rally, to know them, to understand where she
was; and with consciousness came courage, and she lent
her help to theirs.</p>
<p class='c007' >Reuben Cowder, spending his time and money and
wits in inventing devices to hasten Nancy’s recovery,
never could understand how anything but a miracle had
saved her life, cut off as she was from everything that
to him seemed essential. He little understood the
power of resistance to death in Nancy herself, and he
gave nothing like their due to the bracing mountain air
the girl was breathing and the goat’s milk and venison
broth on which she was feeding.</p>
<p class='c007' >The real miracle had been their escape from the
mountains to the shore. Nikola Petrovitch had not
waited for Nancy to rally to make his plans for the
hazardous journey. He was dominated by the fear
that sooner or later the Austrians might reach this hiding place,
that he might be killed. What, then, would
become of Nancy? He must get her to the sea.</p>
<p class='c007' >The project was not so wild as it would seem. The
band of soldiers who had accompanied him to the hamlet
was one of numerous bands that, breaking away
from the main army in its flight, had taken refuge in
remote places in the mountains of western Serbia and
in the Albanian hills. Communications were soon established
between these groups. Secret routes for
messages were opened. It was not long before they
all had learned of the rapid sweep of the enemy into
Montenegro and Albania, of the escape of their king
and a portion of the people into Corfu, of the setting up
there of the Serbian Government, and of the plans already
afoot to rebuild the army.</p>
<p class='c007' >Taking advantage of the opening connections, Nikola
planned with the soldiers for getting Nancy out as
soon as she was able to be carried. When, late in December,
she began to sit up a little, he put his plan
before her, told her of the groups scattered from point
to point, which could be used as resting places, as refuges
in case of need. These groups would know the
best routes to follow, would send guides with them,
would provide food. If she would risk it, he felt that
they should begin the journey at once.</p>
<p class='c007' >Weak as Nancy was in body, she was indomitable
in spirit and welcomed the venture.</p>
<p class='c007' >They wrapped her like a mummy in goat-skins, put
her into a hammock of the same warm covering, and
with bundles on their back, started out—two strong
Serbian soldiers, the native woman who had never
wavered in her devotion from the beginning of the
flight, and Nikola, still on his crutches.</p>
<p class='c007' >Nikola was never tired of telling his Sabinsport
friends of the perils and hardships of the journey. To
him the marvel was not at all that he and his fellows
should have risked their lives, as surely they did; it was
that, whatever the danger, the exposure, the privation,
the girl they carried never lost heart, never complained,
never failed to greet them with smiles. They knew
she grew daily weaker and weaker; but they knew, too,
she meant to live. Her courage was like a banner to
them. It was something they followed—something
they must not shame by discouragement or failure.
They followed it to the end, reaching Durazzo, as I
have told.</p>
<p class='c007' >To Sabinsport the tale took on the features of some
great Odyssey, and it was their Odyssey, for did not
both the heroine and the hero to whom she owed her
life belong to them? Sabinsport had not yet realized
that at that hour every nook and corner of the European
continent had its Odyssey.</p>
<p class='c007' >And it was the town’s introduction to the Balkan
question. Up to now, Serbia had scarcely been included
in the field of war. There was a Western front
and an Eastern for them, but that was all. Serbia’s
tragic fate, brought home to them as it was by Nancy
Cowder’s escape, set them to asking what it meant.
Why should Austria set out to annihilate a people?
Why, even Belgium’s fate, hard as it had been, did not
compare in cruelty with this. She meant to exterminate—nothing
else. How could such things be?
Should such things be? And if not, what should Sabinsport
do about it?</p>
<p class='c007' >The War Board was terribly stirred over the matter,
and Captain Billy did not hesitate to condemn the Allies
bitterly for not having sent aid in time to prevent the
disaster. “If we’d gone into this war when we ought
to,” he declared loudly, “this thing never would have
happened. Our boys would have gotten around there
in time.” And there was a constantly increasing number
of people who agreed with him.</p>
<p class='c007' >Mr. John Commons, with his usual Shavian perversity,
sneered at the indignation of the body, and he
spent an entire evening reviewing the history of the
Balkans, pointing out with real enjoyment the inconsistencies,
violated agreements, murders and cruelties
with which the states charge one another. He claimed
he could match every Bulgar atrocity with a Serbian,
and quoted a well-known modern commission to prove
his point. They were a group of lawless states, born
and brought up to cut one another’s throats—and that
a peaceful group of American citizens should lash themselves
into fighting mood because one of the cut-throats
was getting the worst of it, was only another of the
unspeakable absurdities of this war. And why were
they so stirred up? They hadn’t even remembered
Serbia was in the war until this story about Nancy Cowder
came out. Fool thing for any woman to do—just
another example of the mania for notoriety that had
seized women in these times. He supposed Sabinsport
would insist on making a lion of her when she came
back. He hoped she’d have sense enough to have
nothing to do with the people that had ignored her so
long; that she’d see their interest in Serbia was nothing
in the world but vanity—their desire to flatter
themselves they knew somebody who had been in the
thick of things. Absurd, he called it—enough to
make the gods laugh.</p>
<p class='c007' >The members of the War Board went home much
perturbed after this long harangue, for they were considerably
muddled in their minds. Was their sudden
interest and sympathy ridiculous? Dick was much interested
to find how the thoughtful ones figured it out.
Of course Captain Billy didn’t need to figure it out.
Captain Billy instinctively and promptly took his position
on any question which arrested his attention. He
never had to think—he knew. To him all this “back
history” had nothing to do with the case. Germany
and Austria were the enemy. Serbia was on the side
of the Allies. That was all that was necessary for him
to know. Neither the War Board nor the town was
so sure. In many a quarter of the town Dick ran on
efforts to understand what Europe herself has so long
and so fatally failed to understand. The boys in his
club began to ask for books on the Balkans. It was no
uncommon thing to find the butcher or the grocer catechizing
Czech or Serb or Greek, getting their point of
view. And the stories they heard were repeated.
Nikola Petrovitch became one of the most popular men
in town. The radical Rev. Mr. Pepper gave a series
of Sunday night talks on the submerged Balkan States,
boldly declaring for a United States of Europe, which,
if not a new idea to statesmen and journalists, certainly
was new, and not very intelligible to his congregation,
most of whom thought he was going rather far afield
for something to talk about. And yet they listened,
tried to understand, and many of them discussed the
idea—studied their maps—looked up forgotten histories.</p>
<p class='c007' >It was leaven—working leaven; and slowly there
rose out of it the conviction in Sabinsport that something
was very wrong indeed in Southwestern Europe,
and that the powerful states of those parts, instead of
trying to right the wrongs by just agreements, faithfully
observed, were, and long had been, intent on keeping
the hot-headed little states in turmoil and in suspicion,
watching their chance for a plausible excuse to pounce
on them one by one and absorb them. Certainly this
was as near the truth as you could get in regard to
Serbia and Austria; and it ought to be stopped. There
were few, if any, in Sabinsport yet, however, that felt
that our responsibility reached that part of the world.
To rescue France and avenge Belgium might come to be
our business—<i>was</i> our business, certain ones felt more
and more strongly. But the Balkans? No, that was
not for us.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />