Read Army Boys on the Firing Line; or, Holding Back the German Drive Page 22


  CHAPTER XXII

  A JOYOUS REUNION

  Shouting like so many maniacs, they rushed toward him. At the sameinstant Tom, too, began to run, and in a moment they had their armsaround him, and were hugging him, pounding him, mauling him,exclaiming, questioning, laughing, rejoicing, all in one breath.

  Tom was back with them again, good old Tom, their chum, their comrade,Tom, over whose fate they had spent so many sleepless hours, Tom, forwhom any one of them would have risked his life, Tom who they knew wascaptured, and who they feared might be dead.

  There he was, the same old Tom, with face and body thin, with hairunkempt and matted, with traces showing everywhere of the anxiety andsuffering he had undergone, and yet with the same indomitable spiritthat neither captivity nor threatened death had broken, and the samesmile upon his lips and twinkle in his eyes.

  "Easy, easy there, fellows," he protested laughing. "Let me come upfor air. And before anything else, lead me to some grub. I haven'teaten for so long that there's only a vacuum where my stomach ought tobe."

  "You bet we'll lead you to it," cried Bart.

  "An anaconda will have nothing on you when we get through filling youup," promised Billy.

  "What did I tell you, fellows," cried Frank delightedly. "Didn't I saythe old boy'd be coming in some morning and asking us if breakfast wasready?"

  Tom was giving Frank the long-lost letter he had been carrying whenCorporal Wilson came up with the relief and their greeting was almostas boisterous and hilarious as that of his own particular chums hadbeen, for Tom was a universal favorite in the regiment, and they hadall mourned his loss.

  They would have overwhelmed him with questions, but Frank interposed.

  "Nothing doing, fellows," he said. "This boy isn't going to sayanother word until we've taken him to mess and filled him up till hecan't move. After that there'll be plenty of time for a talk and we'llkeep him talking till the cows come home."

  It was a rejoicing crowd that took Tom back to the main body of theregiment, where he almost had his hands wrung from him. They piled hisplate and filled his coffee cup again and again and watched him whilehe ate like a famished wolf.

  "Tom's running true to form," joked Frank, as they saw the food vanishbefore his onslaught.

  "Whatever else the Huns took away from him, they left him hisappetite," chuckled Billy.

  "Left it?" grinned Tom, as he attacked another helping. "They added toit. I never knew what hunger was before. Bring on anything you'vegot, and I'll tackle it. All except fish. I'm ashamed now to look afish in the face."

  It was a long time before he had had enough. Then with a look ofseraphic contentment on his face he sat back, loosened his belt anotch, and sighed with perfect happiness.

  "Now fellows, fire away," he grinned, "and I'll tell you the sad storyof my life."

  They needed no second invitation, for they had been fairly burstingwith eagerness and curiosity. Questions rained on him thick and fast.Their fists clenched when he told them of the cruelties to which he hadbeen subjected. They were loud in admiration of the way in which hehad met and overcome his difficulties. They roared with laughter whenhe told them of the alarm clock, and Tom himself, to whom it had beenno joke at the time, laughed now as heartily as the rest.

  "So that's the way you got those ropes gnawed through when you were atthe farmhouse," exclaimed Frank, when Tom told them of the aid that hadcome to him from the rats. "We figured out everything else but that.We thought that you must have frayed them against a piece of glass."

  "I used to hate rats," said Tom, "but I don't now. I'll never have atrap set in any house of mine as long as I live."

  "If you'd only known how safe it would have been to walk downstairsthat day!" mourned Frank.

  "Wouldn't it have been bully?" agreed Tom. "Think of the satisfactionit would have been to have had the bulge on that lieutenant who wasgoing to hang me. I wouldn't have done a thing to him!"

  "Well, we got him anyway and that's one comfort," remarked Bart.

  "To think that you were legging it away from the house just as we werecoming toward it," said Billy.

  "It was the toughest kind of luck," admitted Tom. "Yet perhaps it wasall for the best, for then I might not have had the chance to get thebest of Rabig."

  "Rabig?" exclaimed Frank, for the traitor had not yet been mentioned inTom's narrative.

  "What about him?" questioned Billy eagerly.

  "Hold your horses," grinned Tom. "I'll get to him in good time. If ithadn't been for Rabig I wouldn't be here. I owe that much to theskunk, anyway."

  It was hard for them to wait, but they were fully rewarded when Tomdescribed the way in which he had trapped and stripped the renegade,and left him lying in the woods.

  "Bully boy!" exclaimed Frank. "That was the very best day's work youever did."

  "Got the goods on him at last," exulted Bart.

  "The only man in the old Thirty-seventh that has played the yellowdog," commented Billy. "The regiment's well rid of him. He'll neverdare to show his face again."

  "He can fight for Germany now," said Frank, "and if he does, I onlyhope that some day I'll run across him in the fighting."

  "You won't if he sees you first," grinned Billy. "He doesn't want anyof your game."

  Tom had left one thing till the last.

  "By the way, Frank," he remarked casually, "I ran across a fellow inthe German prison camp who came from Auvergne, the same province whereyou've told me your mother lived when she was a girl. He said he knewher family well."

  "Is that so?" asked Frank with quick interest. "What was his name?"

  "Martel," replied Tom.

  "Why that's the name of the butler who used to be in my mother'sfamily!" cried Frank. "Colonel Pavet was telling me that he had beencaptured, and had died in prison. I was hoping that he was mistaken inthat, for the colonel said he had information that might help my motherto get her property."

  "The colonel is right about the man's dying," replied Tom, "for I waswith him when he died."

  "It's too bad," said Frank dejectedly.

  "I shouldn't wonder if he did not know something," said Tom, "for heseemed to have something on his mind. He told me one time that hisimprisonment and sickness happened as a judgment on him."

  "If we could only have had his testimony before he died," mourned Frank.

  "I got it," declared Tom triumphantly.