<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br/> <span class="small">BUTTON DISCOVERS SPIES IN THE HAYMOW</span></h2></div>
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<p class="drop-cap">WHEN Button got back where he had left Billy and the
dogs, he found them all gone.</p>
<p>“I guess Billy thought they better hide somewhere
until I came back. I can soon find them, however, by
running up a tall tree and looking over the place, for even in this
twilight I can see Billy’s white coat. Yes, there is a white object
about his size moving toward the woods. I will follow it and I
bet it will turn out to be Billy. It is too big for a dog, and too small
for a cow.” So Button ran after the white object and soon came
up to Billy and the dogs.</p>
<p>“There, didn’t I tell you dogs he would find us?” said Billy.
“Button, our friends here did not want to leave until you came back.
They were afraid you could not find us, and that you would feel
hurt at our going off when you had gone to get information for me.
They do not know us, do they? That we always understand one
another and know that every move we make is for the best and our
safety. Well, what did you find out?”</p>
<p>“That the two are at this very minute plotting to capture you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
so they can get the reward offered by the General,” and Button
began to laugh.</p>
<p>“What are you laughing at? Tell us,” said Pinky.</p>
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<p>“It is at what those two said. They have you down fine, Billy,
and think you are a foxy old rascal with brains. So the two are
going to lay a deep plot and are not going at it
hastily so as to be sure to catch you. The
chauffeur has promised to eat his shirt if he
can’t catch you in three days.”</p>
<p>“They better lay a deep, dark plot and keep
it under their hats if they intend to catch
me within three days, for I am leaving
in about fifteen minutes,” answered
Billy.</p>
<p>“Oh, Mr. Whiskers, you don’t mean
that! You surely don’t mean to
leave us so soon. Besides, if I am to go with you
to Paris, I can’t possibly get ready in that time. Why, I have all the
chickens, ducks, pigs and the other fowls and animals on the place to
say good-by to, let alone all my friends in the hospital!”</p>
<p>“Then you can’t travel with me, Miss Rosie de la France, as we
three never know ten minutes ahead where we will be next, or what
our next move will be. My being alive now is all due to my being<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
able to think and act quickly. And I must leave here before those
two plotting my capture set eyes on me again. Now here are my
plans. I made them while walking over here. I will go ahead to
the outskirts of the next town. There I will wait for Stubby, Button,
Duke and yourself, if you still feel like risking your life with us,
and taking all the hardships that come along without a whimper or
complaint. For it is our motto never to complain or cry over spilt
milk. What is done is past and gone; why spoil the present and
becloud the future by dwelling on it?”</p>
<p>“Thank you, Mr. Whiskers, but I think probably I better stay
here until my mistress comes for me. My surprising her might turn
out not to be pleasant after all.”</p>
<p>“I think you are wise in your decision, for these are troublous
times to be running around loose without a particular friend, and
I think you are not enough accustomed to hard knocks to travel
with three such hardened travelers as we are.”</p>
<p>“I am glad that sniffly-nosed, red-eyed little poodle is not going
with us,” mused Button to himself. “I never <i>could</i> abide poodles,
anyway, and this one seems to be a sentimental fuss-and-feathers kind
of one.”</p>
<p>“Time’s up, boys! Glad to have met you all, and hope if any
of you ever come to America that I shall have the good luck to run
into you and the chance of returning some of the hospitality you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
have extended to me as well as that I may show you some of our
beautiful country. Remember, Button, as soon as Stubby is able to
travel to meet me on the outskirts of the next town. Good-by,
good-by, kind friends!” and Billy was off.</p>
<p>He had scarcely disappeared in the darkness when the dogs heard
the chauffeur and the cook coming toward the woods. They were
sneaking along, looking carefully under every bush and behind every
pile of stones for Billy.</p>
<p>“I tell you,” said the cook, “I saw him running in this direction
after we had the mix-up with the bees.”</p>
<p>“Skedaddle, all of you!” mewed Button. “Don’t let them find us
all together.”</p>
<div class="figleft"><ANTIMG src="images/i-p098.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p>“How long ago
did you see him coming
in this direction?”
asked the chauffeur.</p>
<p>“Oh, about
three hours.”</p>
<p>“Three
<i>hours</i>! Oh, the dickens!
In that
time he might<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
be half way to Paris. I thought you had seen him just before I
came.”</p>
<p>“Well, he is somewhere around here, I bet.”</p>
<p>“If he is, he is probably laughing inside himself at the spectacle
we make creeping along in the dark looking for him.”</p>
<p>Button went right back to the hospital and climbed up the rope
that was still hanging from the window of Stubby’s ward. He
thought he better go tell Stubby the latest plans while the rope was
still there. He had very good luck indeed, and succeeded in getting
to Stubby without being seen and in telling him what he had heard
the men say and of Billy’s plans for them to join him as soon as he,
Stubby, was able to use his leg.</p>
<p>“Isn’t it too provoking that I have to be laid up with a broken
leg? Why couldn’t it have been my tail or an ear that got hurt?
Then I could have traveled.”</p>
<p>“Never mind, old fellow! You will be all right in a day or two.
In the meantime Billy can amuse himself by getting in more mischief,
and I can pass the time by trying <i>not</i> to get into any here.
I think I better vamoose now or some one will be coming and find
me as I see it is about time they change the night shifts. I’ll see
you in the garden to-morrow. Good-night and pleasant slumbers
free from pain!”</p>
<p>Just as Button was on the window sill about to jump for the rope,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
the second night nurse who was to relieve the one now on duty came
in the room, and it happened to be the one who had seen Button first
and had been trying to argue herself into believing that she had not
seen a big, black cat sitting on the window sill in the moonlight. On
seeing the same cat again in the same place, she screamed and threw
up her hands to cover her eyes. Her cry startled Button so that
he nearly lost his hold of the rope, for he was just sticking his claws
into it preparatory to climbing down when the nurse opened the
door.</p>
<p>When she took her hands from her eyes to look once more and
be sure that the cat was still there, the cat had disappeared, just
as it had done before.</p>
<p>“There is something horrible going to happen to the hospital, I
know,” she said to the other nurse, “for that is twice I have seen the
vision of a big black cat.”</p>
<p>“And I too. I also saw it this evening, just where you did, when
I first came in to take your place. I do hope it is not the forerunner
of a German raid or that the Germans are going to drop bombs on
us.”</p>
<p>It amused Button greatly to see how superstitious the nurses were
about a black cat.</p>
<p>“I wonder how I shall pass the time until Stubby is taken out into
the yard to-morrow,” he thought. “I think I will go over to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
haymow and catch a mouse and see if French mice taste like American
ones.”</p>
<p>He had crawled through a hole in the side of the barn and was
quietly making his way toward where he thought the haymow would
most likely be when he heard whispering voices. He stopped to
listen and made out that they were speaking in German, not in French.
And he immediately thought, “Spies, or escaped prisoners!”</p>
<p>“I’ll just listen and hear what they have to say,” he decided, “but
I’ll try to get a little closer.”</p>
<p>Being black as a coal, he could not be seen easily unless the light
struck his eyes. So he crept cautiously toward where the sound of
the voices came from, and found it was in the haymow above his
head. It took but a minute for Button to climb the ladder that led
up to the mow, but as he stepped from the ladder onto the hay,
it gave way and he fell into a hole in the hay made by one of the
men’s legs when he had stepped off the ladder.</p>
<p>“What was that noise I heard?” said one of the two voices in a
frightened tone.</p>
<p>“S-s-sh-h-h-h! Keep still and listen!” commanded the other.</p>
<p>“I hope it is not that French colonel who has been on our track
for days,” answered the other.</p>
<p>Button never moved, and in fact he held his breath until the men
began talking again.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>“It was probably a rat you heard in the hay,” said the man who
had spoken last. “Don’t you think it is about dark enough for us
to get to our work and blow up this Red Cross hospital, so we can
get back to our line before daylight?”</p>
<p>“So-ho!” thought Button. “You two think because this hospital
has a big red cross on a white ground painted on its roof that it is
a regular hospital for wounded soldiers instead of just one for dogs.
And you have been sent to blow it up! Well, I’ll fix you! I’ll
scratch your eyes out so you can’t see to blow it up.”</p>
<p>Then and there Button began to act as if he had a fit. He flew
out of the hole he had been hiding in and right for the men, whom
he could see plainly with his cat eyes in the dark mow. Before they
knew what was happening, he ran up one’s back, reached around
his neck as he sat on his shoulder and scratched both his eyes out.</p>
<p>“How do you like the feeling? <i>That</i> is for scratching out the
eyes of little Belgian children!”</p>
<p>The man cried out from pain, but what cared Button? He jumped
from this fellow’s shoulders straight into the other’s face and out
went his eyes.</p>
<p>“Now you two can sit here and repent of your sins and think how
the little children suffered whose eyes you dug out! And the Germans
are planning to blow up this hospital, are they? Such being
the case, I must get Stubby away from here at the earliest possible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
moment. I know what I can do. I can carry him on my back, he
is such a little fellow, and he is so thin now that I can easily do it.
Then when we reach Billy, he can carry him and in this way, by
taking turns, we can get him far away from here before the Germans
raid the hospital.”</p>
<p>And this is just what Button did. The very next day when Stubby’s
nurse carried him out of the hospital and placed him on a cushion
under a tree, with the splints off his leg, Button came along and
told him what he had done the night before and that he feared the
Germans would blow up or set fire to the hospital that very night.
By first coaxing, then scolding, he at last persuaded Stubby to consent
to ride on his back and let him take him where Billy was waiting for
them on the outskirts of the town seven miles away. They bade all
the dogs good-by and the Red Cross dog insisted that as he was larger
and stronger than Button he should carry Stubby on his back part
of the journey. “Besides,” he said, “I have a cloth bandage around
my body with the Red Cross sewed on the front. Now this bandage
will be an excellent thing for Stubby to stick his claws in to help
him hold on. It will be much easier trying to do that than trying
to stick them into your short hair, more especially as he has only
three legs he can use.”</p>
<p>And thus they started on their journey, keeping close to the road,
but going just inside the fields and orchards that bordered either<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
side of the highway. They made very good progress, and the Red
Cross dog did not feel the weight of Stubby at all. They rested a
little after noon, and Button and the Red Cross dog left Stubby
behind a straw stack in a barnyard while they sneaked up to the
house to see if they could not find something to eat and to carry
back to Stubby.</p>
<p>“Bow wow!” barked a big dog, jumping out at them from his
kennel. “Who are you that comes prowling around here? Oh,
I beg your pardon! I did not notice you wore the badge of a Red
Cross dog or I should not have barked, for all Red Cross dogs are
welcome in this place and the farmer and his family will do all they
can for you. Just go up to the house and when they see you wear
a Red Cross badge they will give you a hot supper and a soft bed
to sleep on if you care to stay over night. I would go up to the
house with you, but, as you see, I am chained. They will bring some
dinner to me and I will share it with your friend here, the black
cat.”</p>
<p>“I am sure that is very kind of you,” replied Duke, the Red Cross
dog. “Since you say the family here is kind to Red Cross dogs, I
will walk boldly up to the house.”</p>
<p>“You will find them all I say they are, for my master used to train
dogs to be police dogs, and he sold them to the police in Paris. Then
when the war began he trained them for Red Cross work. But all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
his dogs are sold now or gone to war. He was such a good trainer
that he got very high prices for his dogs. I should not wonder but that
you may have met some of the dogs trained by him if you have
been at the front lately, as many of them are in active service there
now.”</p>
<p>“Your master’s name could not possibly be Jean Baptiste Frère,
could it?”</p>
<p>“That is just what it is!”</p>
<p>“Well, well, well! I declare! That is too queer! My chum was
trained by him and lots of the dogs I know. My chum’s name is
Sharp Ears, or rather that is what the Red Cross people call him,
for he seems to be able to hear things long before any one else can
detect the slightest noise. For that reason he is kept on police duty
with the sentinels that have to tramp up and down, up and down
in the deep woods on guard all night. He will hear or scent an
enemy long before he comes in sight, and he always gives warning
by pricking up his ears and looking straight into the sentry’s face,
but he never barks to betray the sentry to the enemy. Then he turns
his face in the direction from which the sound comes. If it is one
of our soldiers, he will keep perfectly still. If it is a German,
Austrian or any of the enemy soldiers, he will give a scarcely audible
growl. He has saved many a sentry’s life by warning him in this
way that some one was coming.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>“How can he tell whether it is an enemy or a friend coming when
he can’t see them?”</p>
<p>“I asked him that very question, and he said he can always tell
a German by the scent as they smell like pigs, and that he had never
made a mistake yet.”</p>
<p>“I did not know before that the German soldiers have an odor
peculiarly their own.”</p>
<p>“Nor I until he told me! Here they come with my dinner now,
and as they don’t like cats very well, I think your friend better hide
in my dog house. I will stand before the door so they can’t see
inside.”</p>
<p>“Hello, Towser!” called out the farmer when he saw Duke. “I
see you have company and most distinguished company at that.
Come here and let me see by your badge to what regiment you
belong.”</p>
<p>Duke went up to the farmer who had a very strong but kindly
face and allowed him to read what was engraved on the tag that
dangled from his collar.</p>
<p>“Why, bless my soul! You are from the same regiment that my
son is in and also the one that owns my best trained dog. Oh, if
you could only talk and tell me how they are faring out on that
battlefront!” And he gave a deep sigh. So did Duke for he too
wished he could talk and tell the farmer of some of the noble, brave<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
deeds his son had performed and also some of the clever, smart things
his dog had done.</p>
<p>“Come with me up to the house and I will give you a dinner that
will make your sides stick out and ready to split,” which he certainly
did. Duke ate and ate and still he could not see the bottom
of his plate. There was fried chicken, with mashed potatoes and
gravy fit for a king to eat. He ate all he possibly could for he knew
it would be a long time before he ever was offered such a dinner
again. But all the time he ate he kept thinking of how Stubby
would enjoy the big chicken leg he was going to carry to him in his
mouth when the farmer left him and he could slip away. He was
just wondering how he was going to get away from the farmer when
some one in the house called him to say that he was wanted on the
telephone.</p>
<p>He had not disappeared inside the door when Duke picked up the
chicken leg and ran with it to Stubby, and as he rounded the stack
from one side Button did from the other with a second drumstick
in his mouth. So you see Stubby fared pretty well.</p>
<p>“Those people seem to be very kind,” said Stubby, “and I guess
it will be a good while before we meet any one their equal again.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span></p>
<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
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