Part 2 (2/2)

His hope was not in vain. A man told him that it was the King of Saxony returning to his capital and palace. John then drew away in some distaste. He did not see why the whole population of a city, even though they were monarchists, should go wild over the coming home of a sovereign. Doubtless the King of Saxony, who was not so young, had come home thousands of times before, and there must be something servile in a people who made such an old story an occasion for a sort of wors.h.i.+p.

He pushed his way out of the crowd and returned to the terrace. But the noise of the shouting and the singing reached him there. Now it was mostly singing, and it showed uncommon fervor. John shrugged his shoulders. He liked such an unreasonable display less than ever, and walked far along the river, until no sound from the crowd reached him.

When he returned toward the hotel everybody had gone, save a few policemen, and John hoped that the king was not only in his palace, but was sound asleep. It must be a great tax upon Saxon energy to demonstrate so heavily every time he came back to the palace, perhaps from nothing more than a drive. He found that Mr. Anson, having exhausted the newspapers, had gone to his room, and pleasantly weary in both body and mind, he sought his own bed.

CHAPTER II

THE THUNDERBOLT

John and Mr. Anson ate breakfast not long after daylight, as they expected to take an early train for Prague. They sat by a window in a small dining-room, overlooking pleasant gardens, and the Elbe, flowing just beyond the stretch of gra.s.s and flowers. The weather of the fickle valley had decided once again to be good. The young suns.h.i.+ne gilded the surface of the river and touched the gray buildings with gold. John was reluctant to leave it, but he had the antic.i.p.ation, too, of fresh conquests, of new cities to be seen and explored.

”We'll be in Prague tonight,” he said, ”and it will be something very different, a place much more medieval than any we have yet visited.”

”That's so,” said Mr. Anson, and he trailed off into a long historical account of Prague, which would serve the double purpose of instructing John, and of exhibiting his own learning. The waiter, who could speak English, and with whom John, being young, did not hesitate to talk at times, was bent over, pouring coffee at his elbow.

”Pardon me, sir, but where did you say you were going?” he asked almost in a whisper.

”To Prague?”

”I shouldn't go there, sir, if I were you.”

”Why not?”

”You'll run into a war.”

”What do you mean, Albrecht?”

But Albrecht was already on the way to the kitchen, and he was so long in returning that John dismissed his words as merely the idle talk of a waiter who wished to entertain Herr Simmering's American guests. But when they went to an agency, according to their custom, to buy the railway tickets to Prague they were informed that it would be better for them not to go to the Czech capital. Both were astonished.

”Why shouldn't we go to Prague?” asked Mr. Anson with some indignation.

”I've never heard that the Czechs object to the presence of Americans.”

”They don't,” replied the agent blandly. ”You can go to Prague without any trouble, but I don't think you could leave it for a long time.”

”And why not. Who would wish to hold us in Prague?”

”n.o.body in particular. But there would be no pa.s.senger trains during the mobilization.”

The eyes of John and Mr. Anson opened wider.

”Mobilization. What mobilization?” asked the elder.

”For the war that Austria-Hungary is going to make on Servia. The various army corps of Bohemia will be mobilized first.”

”A war!” exclaimed Mr. Anson, ”and not a word about it beforehand! Why this is a thunderbolt!”

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