The Blue Grass Seminary Girls on the Water Or, Exciting Adventures on a Summer Cruise Through the Panama Canal

CHAPTER XXX.--THROUGH THE GOLDEN GATE.

Chapter 304,645 wordsPublic domain

There was an audible gasp from passengers and crew, and the same question was upon every lip:

"Who is he?"

As the German lieutenant reached the side of the ship, Captain Von Blusen spoke again:

"Lieutenant Von Meyers!"

The lieutenant turned about sharply, and came to attention.

"You will wait with the boat. I shall go with you."

The lieutenant saluted again and stood stiffly erect in his tracks.

Captain Von Blusen turned to Captain Anderson.

"I shall relieve you of the responsibility of my presence immediately, captain," he said quietly. "I shall go aboard the cruiser."

Captain Anderson was too much taken by surprise to mutter more than:

"Very well, sir."

Why he added the "sir" the captain could not have told, but there was something in the bearing of the man that faced him that called it forth involuntarily.

Captain Von Blusen held out his hand, and the commander of the _Yucatan_ grasped it.

"Good luck to you, sir," said the latter.

"And to you," returned Captain Von Blusen.

He descended from the bridge, and made his way to where the Willing party stood gazing at him in open-eyed wonder.

The German officer first addressed Mr. Willing and Colonel Ashton.

"I am sorry that I have been the means of putting you to so much trouble," he said, with a slight bow, "but whatever I did I considered in line with my duty. Please believe that."

"I have no doubt of it," replied Mr. Willing.

"Nor I," agreed Colonel Ashton.

Captain Von Blusen now turned to Dick, and with the slightest of smiles he extended his hand.

"As you and I had a little difficulty," he said, "I pray you will overlook it."

Dick grasped the extended hand, as he replied.

"Why, of course. I guess I am a bit hot-headed once in a while."

"No more than I am," returned Captain Von Blusen. "It has been my chief fault."

He pressed Dick's hand once more, and then turned to the two girls, who had been too stunned by what they had witnessed, to speak.

The captain extended a hand to each in turn and Shirley and Mabel shook hands with him.

"I am pleased to have met you, Miss Ashton," he said courteously, "and you, Miss Willing, and I regret that I have been the means of causing you unpleasantness. But as I have said to your fathers, what I did was but in the line of duty. Now I must say good-bye, but when the war is over," he looked at Mabel, "I hope that I shall see you both again."

He bowed low, and before the girls could reply, he made his way toward the spot where the German lieutenant stood awaiting him. He motioned the latter to precede him over the side, and was just about to follow, when he seemed to think of something.

He walked quickly back across the deck to where Shirley and Mabel stood, and spoke.

"I suppose you all wonder who I am," he said quietly, "and while I would greatly like to satisfy your curiosity, I fear it is impossible at this time."

Now Shirley found her tongue.

"You can at least tell us whether you are of royal birth," she cried.

Again Captain Von Blusen bowed low.

"I cannot say yes, nor can I deny it," he answered.

"Then your name is not really Captain Von Blusen?"

The captain smiled and bowed, but made no reply.

Now Mabel spoke.

"Captain," she said quietly, "for by such name only can we know you now, we should, of course, be honored with your confidence, but if you cannot speak at this time, I for one shall ask you no questions."

Captain Von Blusen took her hand and bent over it gallantly.

"I thank you, Miss Ashton," he replied quietly. "Some day I hope to be able to confide in you."

He bowed to the others, and turning sharply on his heel, made his way to the side of the ship and clambered over the rail.

Now the passengers hurried to the side of the ship, and gazed with something like awe at the boat that made swiftly for the German cruiser.

Captain Anderson did not give the signal to get under way until the cruiser's launch was being hoisted aboard, when there broke out from the cruiser a salvo of guns.

"A salute!" cried Captain Anderson, raising his voice to make himself heard. "He is some one of importance. Now I wonder----"

He broke off suddenly, as he counted the number of guns and, in his mind, ran over the list of relatives of the German Emperor. Then his clouded brow cleared, and he smiled.

"If he wishes to keep it a secret, I am not the man to betray it," he said to himself.

That Captain Anderson knew who "Captain Von Blusen" really was there could be no doubt, but the commander of the _Yucatan_ kept his promise to himself and confided to no one, in spite of the questions that were poured on him later.

Now Captain Anderson gave the signal to get under way, and the _Yucatan_ slowly gathered headway. The German cruiser remained stationary as the _Yucatan_ approached, and the big steamship passed her less than a quarter of a mile away.

There, on the bridge of the cruiser, with the commander of the vessel and his officers standing at attention, stood "Captain Von Blusen." The passengers waved their hands at him, and he, in return, lifted his cap and made a low bow.

Then the passengers aboard the _Yucatan_ saw him turn to the man they could make out was the commander of the cruiser and give a sharp command. The latter repeated it to one of his officers, and a moment later a second salvo broke out from the cruiser. At the same time the German flag at the masthead was dipped in salute.

"That," said Captain Anderson calmly, "is a fine token of respect. Too bad we haven't the guns with which to return it."

He gave an order, however, and the American ensign at the masthead of the _Yucatan_ returned the salute.

These courtesies having been exchanged, all became bustle and hurry aboard the German cruiser, as the passengers on the _Yucatan_ could see. Men dashed hurriedly hither and thither, and a moment later the cruiser swung slowly about and headed due south.

"And that is the last we shall see of Captain Von Blusen," declared Shirley. "I wonder who he is."

"I haven't any idea," returned Mabel slowly, "but there can be no question that he is of high rank."

"No, there can be no question about that," agreed Mr. Willing, who had overheard this conversation. "I should say that he is a member of the Imperial German family."

"Then what is he doing in the United States?"

"I have learned a couple of Mexican words," replied Mr. Willing. "Quien sabe?" (Who knows.)

"But he said we should hear from him when the war is over," declared Mabel.

"Yes," said Shirley, "he said 'we' but he meant you."

Mabel's face turned a trifle red.

"What do you mean?" she asked in some confusion.

Shirley laughed.

"I guess you know what I mean, all right," she made reply. "Do you remember saying something like that to me once?"

"But I had reason to," protested Mabel. "It was so plain in Dick's case."

"No more so than in Captain Von Blusen's case," declared Shirley.

"I don't see----"

"Oh, yes you do. You mean you just won't admit it. Well, you don't have to. Why, what makes your face so red, Mabel?"

"I don't know what you are talking about," declared Mabel, and turning about quickly, she rushed to her cabin, leaving Shirley laughing to herself.

The steamship _Yucatan_ was forging ahead at full speed now, and was rapidly lessening the distance to the first California port--San Diego.

"Dad," said Shirley, "isn't there a second fair at San Diego?"

"Yes," replied her father, "why?"

"Well then, why can't we stop off there for a day or two and go on to San Francisco by rail?"

"We can if you wish it," replied Mr. Willing.

"Then let's do, Dad."

"All right."

And so it was arranged. Shirley went below where she and Mabel immediately began gathering their things together so that they would be ready to leave the boat the moment it docked at San Diego.

There was no question that the girls had become great favorites with all the passengers. Many pressed them to continue the trip to San Francisco, Captain Anderson being one of the most anxious to keep them aboard as long as possible.

"I don't know what I shall do without you," he told Shirley and Mabel. "We have had lots of excitement on this voyage, more than ever before, and you two girls have been mainly responsible for it. I hope that I shall see you again some time."

"Why," said Shirley, "there are many more summers coming, and if we ever decide to make this trip again we shall not ever think of taking any boat but yours."

"May the time come soon," said the captain.

The passengers bade them an affectionate good-bye as they left the _Yucatan_ at San Diego, and then they entered a taxi and were driven to a hotel, where they once more made themselves comfortable for a stay ashore.

They spent two days at the San Diego exposition, and then took a train for San Francisco to view, as Shirley expressed it, "the greatest sight they ever expected to see."

And none of the party was a whit disappointed in the great exposition. In fact, it was far beyond expectations. For two weeks they remained in the California metropolis, spending every minute possible upon the large exposition grounds overlooking the Golden Gate and the broad expanse to the Pacific.

When the time came for them to betake themselves homeward, it was with regret that they realized it would be long before they could again hope to see the beauties of the far-off state of California.

There remains yet one incident to be told.

Two weeks after their return home, Mabel received a registered package postmarked Rome, Italy. Eagerly she ran to her room with it, where she opened it in solitude; nor could she repress a cry of admiration when she drew out a beautifully bejeweled cross, patterned after the Iron Cross of Germany--the Iron Cross with which the German Emperor decorates his troops for bravery.

With it there was a brief note, with the signature "Captain Von Blusen."

Looking closer at the piece of paper on which the message was written, Mabel perceived a seal of peculiar design. She ran hastily for her dictionary, and turned to the seals of the various nations.

There was a striking similarity between the seal on the paper and the Imperial German seal, as reproduced, in colors, in her big dictionary.

For perhaps half an hour the girl sat silent, musing.

"Can it be possible?" she asked herself at last "I wonder----"

She rushed downstairs to consult Shirley, who at that moment was holding a tete-a-tete with Dick on the sunny front porch.

THE END.

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