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Without saying a word the Secretary of War moved the blocks representing Fisher's division further South. Then he remarked quietly: "It doesn't make much difference what happens at Georgetown, the decision rests right here now and the next hour may decide it all," and he put his finger on the spot in the mountains occupied by the enemy's left wing.
"If an attack on the enemy's front should make a gap----"
He didn't complete the sentence, for the President's hand rested heavily on his shoulder. "Yes, Harry," he said, "if--that's what we've been saying for nine months. If--and our If has always been followed by a But--the enemy's But."
He threw himself into a chair and shaded his tired eyes with his hand, while the Secretary of War walked incessantly up and down, puffing on a fresh cigar.--
The night was almost over.--The shrill little bell rang again, causing the President to start violently. Slowly, inch by inch, the white strip of paper was rolled off, and stooping together over the ticking instrument, the two men watched one letter, one word, one sentence after another appear, until at last it was all there:
"Fort Bridger, Feb. 9, 1.15 a.m. A returning motor air-ship reports a furious artillery fight in the rear of the enemy's left wing. Have just issued orders for a general attack on the hostile positions on the heights. Cannonade raging all along the line. Reports from Bell's Pa.s.s state that enemy is retreating from Georgetown. Twelve of the enemy's guns captured.
"MAJOR GENERAL ILLING."
"Harry!" cried the President, seizing his friend's hand, "suppose this means victory!"
"It does, it must," was the answer. "Look here," he said, as he rearranged the blocks on the map, "the whole pressure of General Elliott's three divisions is concentrated on the enemy's left wing. All that's necessary is a determined attack----"
"On the entrenchments in the dark?" broke in the President, "when the men are so apt to lose touch with their leaders, when they're shooting at random, when a mere chance may wrest away the victory and give it to the enemy?"
The Secretary of War shook his head, saying: "The fate of battles rests in the hands of G.o.d; we must have faith in our troops."
He walked around the table with long strides, while the President compared the positions of the armies on the map with the contents of the last telegram.
"Harry," he said, looking up, "do you remember the speech I made at Harvard years ago on the unity of nations? That was my first speech, and who would have thought that we should now be sitting together in this room? It's strange how it all comes back to me now. Even then, as a young man, I was deeply interested in the development of the idea of German national unity as expressed in German poetry; and much that I read then has become full of meaning for us, too, especially in these latter days. One of those German songs is ringing in my ears to-night.
Oh, if it could only come true, if our brave men over there storming the rocky heights could only make it come true--" At this moment the telegraph-bell again rang sharply:
"Fort Bridger, Feb. 9, 2.36 a.m. With enormous losses the brigades of Lennox and Malmberg have stormed the positions occupied by the artillery on the enemy's left wing, and have captured numerous guns.
The thunder of cannon coming from the valley can be distinctly heard here on the heights. Fisher's division has signaled that they have successfully driven back the enemy. The j.a.panese are beginning to retreat all along the line. Our troops----"
The President could read no further, for the words were dancing before his eyes. This stern man, whom nothing could bend or break, now had tears in his eyes as he folded his hands over the telegraph instrument, from which the tape continued to come forth, and said in a deeply moved voice: "Harry, this hour is greater than the Fourth of July. And now, Harry, I remember it, that song of the German poet; may it become our prayer of thanksgiving:"
"From tower to tower let the bells be rung, Throughout our land let our joy be sung!
Light every beacon far and near, To show that G.o.d hath helped us here!
Praise be to G.o.d on High!"
Then the President stepped over to the window and pushing aside the curtains, opened it and looked out into the cold winter morning for a long time.
"Harry," he called presently, "doesn't it seem as though the bells were ringing? Thus far no one knows the glad tidings but you and I; but very soon they'll awake to paeans of victory and then our flag will wave proudly once more and we'll have no trouble in winning back the missing stars."
It was a moment of the highest national exaltation, such as a nation experiences only once in a hundred years.
A solitary policeman was patrolling up and down before the White House, and he started violently as he heard a voice above him calling out:
"Run as hard as you can and call out on all the streets: The enemy is defeated, our troops have conquered, the j.a.panese army is in full retreat! Knock at the doors and windows and shout into every home: we have won, the enemy is retreating."
The policeman hurried off, leaving big black footprints in the white snow, and he could be heard yelling out: "Victory, victory, we've beaten the j.a.ps!" as he ran.
People began to collect in the streets and a coachman jumped down from his box and ran towards the White House, looking up at its lighted windows.
"Leave your carriage here," shouted the President, "and run as hard as you can and tell everybody you meet that we have won and that the j.a.panese are in full retreat! Our country will be free once more!"
Shouts were heard in the distance, and the noise of loud knocking. And then the President closed the window and came back into the room. But when the Secretary of War wanted to read the balance of the message, he said: "Don't, Harry; I couldn't listen to another word now, but please rouse everybody in the house."
Then bells rang in the halls and people were heard to stir in the rooms.
There was a joyous awakening in the quiet capital that ninth day of February, the day that dispelled the darkness and the gloom.
That day marked the beginning of the end. _The yellow peril had been averted!_