Part 12 (1/2)
The alarm and excitement were not decreased when, almost immediately, there was a great outburst of flame in one of the large workshops devoted to the building of the bodies of railway carriages and trucks, and the cha.s.sis of motorcars. With extraordinary rapidity the flames leapt up from floor to floor, until the great yards in the vicinity, a moment before plunged in blackness by the destruction of the electric-light plant, were again as light as day.
”See that, Max?” whispered Dale in an awestruck voice as the flames leaped up. ”Surely our raid on the power-house cannot have done that?”
”I expect that something was upset in the mad rush for the doors. The place is full of inflammables, and they will never get the fire out--you see.”
The scene was of absorbing interest, and Max and Dale and the faithful Dubec mingled with the crowds of excited workmen and thoroughly enjoyed themselves. Alarm-bells were sounding and bugle-calls ringing in all directions, and in a few minutes two or three engines dashed into the yard and began a hopeless fight against the raging fire. Max and his friends continued to gaze on at the exciting scene until the former was recalled to himself by the heavy tramp of what seemed to be detachments of soldiers outside the walls of the yard.
”Listen, Dale, I can hear a lot of troops marching outside. I don't think their presence bodes any good, and I think we had better be off.
The Germans will be most awfully savage, and will be firing on the mob, or something of the sort.”
”Shouldn't wonder, old man. Well, we've done enough for one night, so let us join this crowd and leave by the main entrance.”
A number of workmen, who were probably of the same mind as Max and did not like the look of things, were moving towards the gates, and to these our three friends joined themselves. On reaching the gates, however, the whole party came to a standstill. The gates were closed, and a dozen soldiers with fixed bayonets stood on guard in front of them.
”We made a mistake, Dale, in not getting away at once,” whispered Max.
”We shall have trouble now, you may be sure.”
As he spoke, the gates were opened and a motorcar drove through. It contained the manager, M. Schenk, and two officers, and came to a stand on the outskirts of the crowd collected at the gates. The manager immediately stood up in the car and addressed the crowd in such stern and peremptory tones that it would have seemed fitter, Max thought, had the words been uttered by one of the officers at his side.
”Listen, men. A dastardly outrage has just been committed in these works, and I am determined to bring the guilty ones to justice. I shall allow no one to leave until he has been thoroughly examined, however long it may take. Stand aside, therefore, and await your call quietly, or I shall have recourse to sterner measures.”
The car moved on, and the workmen addressed stopped obediently where they were and began discussing the affair in low, excited tones.
”This sort of thing won't suit us, Dale,” whispered Max, as he edged out of the crowd and began moving away from the gates. ”Examinations are not a strong point with us at present.”
”No, we require to study a little more--in strict seclusion,” replied Dale in the same spirit, as they got away from the crowd into the blackness between a long workshop at a distance from the burning building and the outer walls.
”Where now, Master,” asked Dubec, looking at Max enquiringly as the three came to an involuntary halt.
”Over the walls and away, I think. We have done enough for one night, and I fancy Schenk will think so too--eh, Dale?”
”Aye, and say so, if ever he gets the chance,” replied the latter.
The party moved to the walls at the darkest point they could find and prepared to clamber over. The wall was here nearly ten feet high, and it was necessary for Dubec to plant himself against it and allow Max, a.s.sisted by Dale, to climb on his back. He could then help Dale up also before clambering on to the top. The rest would be easy enough. But a rude awakening was in store for them, for Max had no sooner put his head above the wall than he was greeted by a rifle-shot from the road below, and a bullet whizzed close overhead.
”Down, Max, down!” cried Dale, clutching at his friend in sudden consternation.
”I'm all right, old man,” replied Max, who, needless to say, had lost no time in bobbing down below the level of the wall. ”But we can't get over here,” he added as he lowered himself gently to the ground. Dale followed suit, and the three men stood at the foot of the wall and anxiously debated their next move.
”It is pretty clear,” Max summed up, ”that the Germans have put a cordon of soldiers all about the works, and clearer still”--a little ruefully this--”that their orders are to shoot first and make enquiries afterwards.”
”We must chance it and try to get over somewhere,” responded Dale.
”No--too risky. The moment we top the wall we show up plainly against the light of the fire behind us. We should be noticed at once. We must try another plan.”
”What's that?”
”The river.”