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<h2> Chapter V. Prisoners and captives. </h2>
<p>It was one day when Mother had gone to Maidbridge. She had gone alone, but
the children were to go to the station to meet her. And, loving the
station as they did, it was only natural that they should be there a good
hour before there was any chance of Mother's train arriving, even if the
train were punctual, which was most unlikely. No doubt they would have
been just as early, even if it had been a fine day, and all the delights
of woods and fields and rocks and rivers had been open to them. But it
happened to be a very wet day and, for July, very cold. There was a wild
wind that drove flocks of dark purple clouds across the sky "like herds of
dream-elephants," as Phyllis said. And the rain stung sharply, so that the
way to the station was finished at a run. Then the rain fell faster and
harder, and beat slantwise against the windows of the booking office and
of the chill place that had General Waiting Room on its door.</p>
<p>"It's like being in a besieged castle," Phyllis said; "look at the arrows
of the foe striking against the battlements!"</p>
<p>"It's much more like a great garden-squirt," said Peter.</p>
<p>They decided to wait on the up side, for the down platform looked very wet
indeed, and the rain was driving right into the little bleak shelter where
down-passengers have to wait for their trains.</p>
<p>The hour would be full of incident and of interest, for there would be two
up trains and one down to look at before the one that should bring Mother
back.</p>
<p>"Perhaps it'll have stopped raining by then," said Bobbie; "anyhow, I'm
glad I brought Mother's waterproof and umbrella."</p>
<p>They went into the desert spot labelled General Waiting Room, and the time
passed pleasantly enough in a game of advertisements. You know the game,
of course? It is something like dumb Crambo. The players take it in turns
to go out, and then come back and look as like some advertisement as they
can, and the others have to guess what advertisement it is meant to be.
Bobbie came in and sat down under Mother's umbrella and made a sharp face,
and everyone knew she was the fox who sits under the umbrella in the
advertisement. Phyllis tried to make a Magic Carpet of Mother's
waterproof, but it would not stand out stiff and raft-like as a Magic
Carpet should, and nobody could guess it. Everyone thought Peter was
carrying things a little too far when he blacked his face all over with
coal-dust and struck a spidery attitude and said he was the blot that
advertises somebody's Blue Black Writing Fluid.</p>
<p>It was Phyllis's turn again, and she was trying to look like the Sphinx
that advertises What's-his-name's Personally Conducted Tours up the Nile
when the sharp ting of the signal announced the up train. The children
rushed out to see it pass. On its engine were the particular driver and
fireman who were now numbered among the children's dearest friends.
Courtesies passed between them. Jim asked after the toy engine, and Bobbie
pressed on his acceptance a moist, greasy package of toffee that she had
made herself.</p>
<p>Charmed by this attention, the engine-driver consented to consider her
request that some day he would take Peter for a ride on the engine.</p>
<p>"Stand back, Mates," cried the engine-driver, suddenly, "and horf she
goes."</p>
<p>And sure enough, off the train went. The children watched the tail-lights
of the train till it disappeared round the curve of the line, and then
turned to go back to the dusty freedom of the General Waiting Room and the
joys of the advertisement game.</p>
<p>They expected to see just one or two people, the end of the procession of
passengers who had given up their tickets and gone away. Instead, the
platform round the door of the station had a dark blot round it, and the
dark blot was a crowd of people.</p>
<p>"Oh!" cried Peter, with a thrill of joyous excitement, "something's
happened! Come on!"</p>
<p>They ran down the platform. When they got to the crowd, they could, of
course, see nothing but the damp backs and elbows of the people on the
crowd's outside. Everybody was talking at once. It was evident that
something had happened.</p>
<p>"It's my belief he's nothing worse than a natural," said a
farmerish-looking person. Peter saw his red, clean-shaven face as he
spoke.</p>
<p>"If you ask me, I should say it was a Police Court case," said a young man
with a black bag.</p>
<p>"Not it; the Infirmary more like—"</p>
<p>Then the voice of the Station Master was heard, firm and official:—</p>
<p>"Now, then—move along there. I'll attend to this, if YOU please."</p>
<p>But the crowd did not move. And then came a voice that thrilled the
children through and through. For it spoke in a foreign language. And,
what is more, it was a language that they had never heard. They had heard
French spoken and German. Aunt Emma knew German, and used to sing a song
about bedeuten and zeiten and bin and sin. Nor was it Latin. Peter had
been in Latin for four terms.</p>
<p>It was some comfort, anyhow, to find that none of the crowd understood the
foreign language any better than the children did.</p>
<p>"What's that he's saying?" asked the farmer, heavily.</p>
<p>"Sounds like French to me," said the Station Master, who had once been to
Boulogne for the day.</p>
<p>"It isn't French!" cried Peter.</p>
<p>"What is it, then?" asked more than one voice. The crowd fell back a
little to see who had spoken, and Peter pressed forward, so that when the
crowd closed up again he was in the front rank.</p>
<p>"I don't know what it is," said Peter, "but it isn't French. I know that."
Then he saw what it was that the crowd had for its centre. It was a man—the
man, Peter did not doubt, who had spoken in that strange tongue. A man
with long hair and wild eyes, with shabby clothes of a cut Peter had not
seen before—a man whose hands and lips trembled, and who spoke again
as his eyes fell on Peter.</p>
<p>"No, it's not French," said Peter.</p>
<p>"Try him with French if you know so much about it," said the farmer-man.</p>
<p>"Parlay voo Frongsay?" began Peter, boldly, and the next moment the crowd
recoiled again, for the man with the wild eyes had left leaning against
the wall, and had sprung forward and caught Peter's hands, and begun to
pour forth a flood of words which, though he could not understand a word
of them, Peter knew the sound of.</p>
<p>"There!" said he, and turned, his hands still clasped in the hands of the
strange shabby figure, to throw a glance of triumph at the crowd; "there;
THAT'S French."</p>
<p>"What does he say?"</p>
<p>"I don't know." Peter was obliged to own it.</p>
<p>"Here," said the Station Master again; "you move on if you please. I'LL
deal with this case."</p>
<p>A few of the more timid or less inquisitive travellers moved slowly and
reluctantly away. And Phyllis and Bobbie got near to Peter. All three had
been TAUGHT French at school. How deeply they now wished that they had
LEARNED it! Peter shook his head at the stranger, but he also shook his
hands as warmly and looked at him as kindly as he could. A person in the
crowd, after some hesitation, said suddenly, "No comprenny!" and then,
blushing deeply, backed out of the press and went away.</p>
<p>"Take him into your room," whispered Bobbie to the Station Master. "Mother
can talk French. She'll be here by the next train from Maidbridge."</p>
<p>The Station Master took the arm of the stranger, suddenly but not
unkindly. But the man wrenched his arm away, and cowered back coughing and
trembling and trying to push the Station Master away.</p>
<p>"Oh, don't!" said Bobbie; "don't you see how frightened he is? He thinks
you're going to shut him up. I know he does—look at his eyes!"</p>
<p>"They're like a fox's eyes when the beast's in a trap," said the farmer.</p>
<p>"Oh, let me try!" Bobbie went on; "I do really know one or two French
words if I could only think of them."</p>
<p>Sometimes, in moments of great need, we can do wonderful things—things
that in ordinary life we could hardly even dream of doing. Bobbie had
never been anywhere near the top of her French class, but she must have
learned something without knowing it, for now, looking at those wild,
hunted eyes, she actually remembered and, what is more, spoke, some French
words. She said:—</p>
<p>"Vous attendre. Ma mere parlez Francais. Nous—what's the French for
'being kind'?"</p>
<p>Nobody knew.</p>
<p>"Bong is 'good,'" said Phyllis.</p>
<p>"Nous etre bong pour vous."</p>
<p>I do not know whether the man understood her words, but he understood the
touch of the hand she thrust into his, and the kindness of the other hand
that stroked his shabby sleeve.</p>
<p>She pulled him gently towards the inmost sanctuary of the Station Master.
The other children followed, and the Station Master shut the door in the
face of the crowd, which stood a little while in the booking office
talking and looking at the fast closed yellow door, and then by ones and
twos went its way, grumbling.</p>
<p>Inside the Station Master's room Bobbie still held the stranger's hand and
stroked his sleeve.</p>
<p>"Here's a go," said the Station Master; "no ticket—doesn't even know
where he wants to go. I'm not sure now but what I ought to send for the
police."</p>
<p>"Oh, DON'T!" all the children pleaded at once. And suddenly Bobbie got
between the others and the stranger, for she had seen that he was crying.</p>
<p>By a most unusual piece of good fortune she had a handkerchief in her
pocket. By a still more uncommon accident the handkerchief was moderately
clean. Standing in front of the stranger, she got out the handkerchief and
passed it to him so that the others did not see.</p>
<p>"Wait till Mother comes," Phyllis was saying; "she does speak French
beautifully. You'd just love to hear her."</p>
<p>"I'm sure he hasn't done anything like you're sent to prison for," said
Peter.</p>
<p>"Looks like without visible means to me," said the Station Master. "Well,
I don't mind giving him the benefit of the doubt till your Mamma comes. I
SHOULD like to know what nation's got the credit of HIM, that I should."</p>
<p>Then Peter had an idea. He pulled an envelope out of his pocket, and
showed that it was half full of foreign stamps.</p>
<p>"Look here," he said, "let's show him these—"</p>
<p>Bobbie looked and saw that the stranger had dried his eyes with her
handkerchief. So she said: "All right."</p>
<p>They showed him an Italian stamp, and pointed from him to it and back
again, and made signs of question with their eyebrows. He shook his head.
Then they showed him a Norwegian stamp—the common blue kind it was—and
again he signed No. Then they showed him a Spanish one, and at that he
took the envelope from Peter's hand and searched among the stamps with a
hand that trembled. The hand that he reached out at last, with a gesture
as of one answering a question, contained a RUSSIAN stamp.</p>
<p>"He's Russian," cried Peter, "or else he's like 'the man who was'—in
Kipling, you know."</p>
<p>The train from Maidbridge was signalled.</p>
<p>"I'll stay with him till you bring Mother in," said Bobbie.</p>
<p>"You're not afraid, Missie?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no," said Bobbie, looking at the stranger, as she might have looked
at a strange dog of doubtful temper. "You wouldn't hurt me, would you?"</p>
<p>She smiled at him, and he smiled back, a queer crooked smile. And then he
coughed again. And the heavy rattling swish of the incoming train swept
past, and the Station Master and Peter and Phyllis went out to meet it.
Bobbie was still holding the stranger's hand when they came back with
Mother.</p>
<p>The Russian rose and bowed very ceremoniously.</p>
<p>Then Mother spoke in French, and he replied, haltingly at first, but
presently in longer and longer sentences.</p>
<p>The children, watching his face and Mother's, knew that he was telling her
things that made her angry and pitying, and sorry and indignant all at
once.</p>
<p>"Well, Mum, what's it all about?" The Station Master could not restrain
his curiosity any longer.</p>
<p>"Oh," said Mother, "it's all right. He's a Russian, and he's lost his
ticket. And I'm afraid he's very ill. If you don't mind, I'll take him
home with me now. He's really quite worn out. I'll run down and tell you
all about him to-morrow."</p>
<p>"I hope you won't find you're taking home a frozen viper," said the
Station Master, doubtfully.</p>
<p>"Oh, no," Mother said brightly, and she smiled; "I'm quite sure I'm not.
Why, he's a great man in his own country, writes books—beautiful
books—I've read some of them; but I'll tell you all about it
to-morrow."</p>
<p>She spoke again in French to the Russian, and everyone could see the
surprise and pleasure and gratitude in his eyes. He got up and politely
bowed to the Station Master, and offered his arm most ceremoniously to
Mother. She took it, but anybody could have seen that she was helping him
along, and not he her.</p>
<p>"You girls run home and light a fire in the sitting-room," Mother said,
"and Peter had better go for the Doctor."</p>
<p>But it was Bobbie who went for the Doctor.</p>
<p>"I hate to tell you," she said breathlessly when she came upon him in his
shirt sleeves, weeding his pansy-bed, "but Mother's got a very shabby
Russian, and I'm sure he'll have to belong to your Club. I'm certain he
hasn't got any money. We found him at the station."</p>
<p>"Found him! Was he lost, then?" asked the Doctor, reaching for his coat.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Bobbie, unexpectedly, "that's just what he was. He's been
telling Mother the sad, sweet story of his life in French; and she said
would you be kind enough to come directly if you were at home. He has a
dreadful cough, and he's been crying."</p>
<p>The Doctor smiled.</p>
<p>"Oh, don't," said Bobbie; "please don't. You wouldn't if you'd seen him. I
never saw a man cry before. You don't know what it's like."</p>
<p>Dr. Forrest wished then that he hadn't smiled.</p>
<p>When Bobbie and the Doctor got to Three Chimneys, the Russian was sitting
in the arm-chair that had been Father's, stretching his feet to the blaze
of a bright wood fire, and sipping the tea Mother had made him.</p>
<p>"The man seems worn out, mind and body," was what the Doctor said; "the
cough's bad, but there's nothing that can't be cured. He ought to go
straight to bed, though—and let him have a fire at night."</p>
<p>"I'll make one in my room; it's the only one with a fireplace," said
Mother. She did, and presently the Doctor helped the stranger to bed.</p>
<p>There was a big black trunk in Mother's room that none of the children had
ever seen unlocked. Now, when she had lighted the fire, she unlocked it
and took some clothes out—men's clothes—and set them to air by
the newly lighted fire. Bobbie, coming in with more wood for the fire, saw
the mark on the night-shirt, and looked over to the open trunk. All the
things she could see were men's clothes. And the name marked on the shirt
was Father's name. Then Father hadn't taken his clothes with him. And that
night-shirt was one of Father's new ones. Bobbie remembered its being
made, just before Peter's birthday. Why hadn't Father taken his clothes?
Bobbie slipped from the room. As she went she heard the key turned in the
lock of the trunk. Her heart was beating horribly. WHY hadn't Father taken
his clothes? When Mother came out of the room, Bobbie flung tightly
clasping arms round her waist, and whispered:—</p>
<p>"Mother—Daddy isn't—isn't DEAD, is he?"</p>
<p>"My darling, no! What made you think of anything so horrible?"</p>
<p>"I—I don't know," said Bobbie, angry with herself, but still
clinging to that resolution of hers, not to see anything that Mother
didn't mean her to see.</p>
<p>Mother gave her a hurried hug. "Daddy was quite, QUITE well when I heard
from him last," she said, "and he'll come back to us some day. Don't fancy
such horrible things, darling!"</p>
<p>Later on, when the Russian stranger had been made comfortable for the
night, Mother came into the girls' room. She was to sleep there in
Phyllis's bed, and Phyllis was to have a mattress on the floor, a most
amusing adventure for Phyllis. Directly Mother came in, two white figures
started up, and two eager voices called:—</p>
<p>"Now, Mother, tell us all about the Russian gentleman."</p>
<p>A white shape hopped into the room. It was Peter, dragging his quilt
behind him like the tail of a white peacock.</p>
<p>"We have been patient," he said, "and I had to bite my tongue not to go to
sleep, and I just nearly went to sleep and I bit too hard, and it hurts
ever so. DO tell us. Make a nice long story of it."</p>
<p>"I can't make a long story of it to-night," said Mother; "I'm very tired."</p>
<p>Bobbie knew by her voice that Mother had been crying, but the others
didn't know.</p>
<p>"Well, make it as long as you can," said Phil, and Bobbie got her arms
round Mother's waist and snuggled close to her.</p>
<p>"Well, it's a story long enough to make a whole book of. He's a writer;
he's written beautiful books. In Russia at the time of the Czar one dared
not say anything about the rich people doing wrong, or about the things
that ought to be done to make poor people better and happier. If one did
one was sent to prison."</p>
<p>"But they CAN'T," said Peter; "people only go to prison when they've done
wrong."</p>
<p>"Or when the Judges THINK they've done wrong," said Mother. "Yes, that's
so in England. But in Russia it was different. And he wrote a beautiful
book about poor people and how to help them. I've read it. There's nothing
in it but goodness and kindness. And they sent him to prison for it. He
was three years in a horrible dungeon, with hardly any light, and all damp
and dreadful. In prison all alone for three years."</p>
<p>Mother's voice trembled a little and stopped suddenly.</p>
<p>"But, Mother," said Peter, "that can't be true NOW. It sounds like
something out of a history book—the Inquisition, or something."</p>
<p>"It WAS true," said Mother; "it's all horribly true. Well, then they took
him out and sent him to Siberia, a convict chained to other convicts—wicked
men who'd done all sorts of crimes—a long chain of them, and they
walked, and walked, and walked, for days and weeks, till he thought they'd
never stop walking. And overseers went behind them with whips—yes,
whips—to beat them if they got tired. And some of them went lame,
and some fell down, and when they couldn't get up and go on, they beat
them, and then left them to die. Oh, it's all too terrible! And at last he
got to the mines, and he was condemned to stay there for life—for
life, just for writing a good, noble, splendid book."</p>
<p>"How did he get away?"</p>
<p>"When the war came, some of the Russian prisoners were allowed to
volunteer as soldiers. And he volunteered. But he deserted at the first
chance he got and—"</p>
<p>"But that's very cowardly, isn't it"—said Peter—"to desert?
Especially when it's war."</p>
<p>"Do you think he owed anything to a country that had done THAT to him? If
he did, he owed more to his wife and children. He didn't know what had
become of them."</p>
<p>"Oh," cried Bobbie, "he had THEM to think about and be miserable about
TOO, then, all the time he was in prison?"</p>
<p>"Yes, he had them to think about and be miserable about all the time he
was in prison. For anything he knew they might have been sent to prison,
too. They did those things in Russia. But while he was in the mines some
friends managed to get a message to him that his wife and children had
escaped and come to England. So when he deserted he came here to look for
them."</p>
<p>"Had he got their address?" said practical Peter.</p>
<p>"No; just England. He was going to London, and he thought he had to change
at our station, and then he found he'd lost his ticket and his purse."</p>
<p>"Oh, DO you think he'll find them?—I mean his wife and children, not
the ticket and things."</p>
<p>"I hope so. Oh, I hope and pray that he'll find his wife and children
again."</p>
<p>Even Phyllis now perceived that mother's voice was very unsteady.</p>
<p>"Why, Mother," she said, "how very sorry you seem to be for him!"</p>
<p>Mother didn't answer for a minute. Then she just said, "Yes," and then she
seemed to be thinking. The children were quiet.</p>
<p>Presently she said, "Dears, when you say your prayers, I think you might
ask God to show His pity upon all prisoners and captives."</p>
<p>"To show His pity," Bobbie repeated slowly, "upon all prisoners and
captives. Is that right, Mother?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Mother, "upon all prisoners and captives. All prisoners and
captives."</p>
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