a kitchen towel over it. âBetter not carry the tins in the open. They might tempt someone. I wish I could send you home in the riksha but of course the puller has goneâa faithful fellow, too. Lao Li was his name. Thereâs only the gate keeper.â
He was leading the way to the door. âYouâd better get home as fast as you can. Tell your father that he must get your family into the Legation Quarter if any trouble comes. Weâll have to stick together. I suppose our governments will send soldiers to rescue us. They may be on the way.â
âIâm afraid my father wonât go into the Legation,â Clem said. To explain that his father would consider such retreat a total loss of faith, might hurt Dr. Laneâs feelings.
But Dr. Lane knew. âAh,â he said, âit takes more courage than I have for such faith. For myself, I canâbut not for my son.â
They were at the door now and the old gateman was waiting.
âGood-by, Clem,â Dr. Lane said.
âGood-by, sir.â
The gateman stared at the basket, and he went into his little room and brought out some old shoes and put them on top of the towel. âLet it seem rubbish,â he said, âotherwise you will be robbed.â
The gate shut behind Clem and he was alone in the street, the basket heavy upon his arm. It was midmorning, and the sun was beginning to be hot. There were a few people about now, all men, and he saw they were soldiers, wearing the baggy brightly colored uniform of the Imperial Palace. He tried to escape their notice, and had succeeded, he thought, for their officer was laughing and joking and did not notice him. They were looking at a foreign gun the officer held. Then they did see him and they started after him. He began to run. On another day, at another hour, he might have shown better sense by stopping to talk with them in their own tongue. Now he wanted only to keep his face hidden from them, his face and his pale foreign eyes. He ran out of the alleyways into Hatamen Street, the eastern boundary of the Legation. Perhaps he could get into the Legation gate. He turned and was stopped by a small procession of two sedan chairs and their outriders. In the sedans he looked into two foreign faces, arrogant, severe, bearded faces he had never seen before. Before he could slip away into an alley again, he was caught between the Chinese soldiers and the foreigners in their sedans. The soldiers blocked the street so that the bearers were forced to set the sedans down.
Now the curtain of the first sedan lifted and the foreigner put out his head and shouted fiercely to the soldiers, âOut of the way! I am Von Ketteler, the German Ambassador, and I go for audience with the Empress!â
The second sedan opened and he heard a guttural warning. It came too late. The Chinese officer raised his foreign gun and leveled it at the German. Clem saw a spit of fire and the Ambassador crumpled, dead. Clem crawled behind the sedan, and clutching his basket, he hurried as fast as he could from the dreadful spot.
Homeward he ran through streets now filling with people. It was hopeless to escape them. Hands reached out and tore away the coverings of the basket and revealed the food. Dirty hands fought for the tins and emptied the basket in an instant, and then he felt hands laid upon him.
âA foreigner, a foreign devilââ he heard voices screaming at the sight of his face. He burrowed among legs and forced his way through, agile with terror, and hid himself inside an open gate, looking this way and that until he saw a womanâs angry face at a window and then he darted out again. Now he was near home and the crowd was surging in the opposite direction to see the murdered German. He was safe for a moment but what would he do without the food? He began to sob and tried to stop because his sobs shook him so he could not run, and then he had no breath to run and so he walked, limping