The three Circassian slaves had been
sent as a present to the real pasha, Osmond’s
master, by some friendly Algerian prince, and, arriving
in the absence of the pasha, the deputy had cast greedy
eyes upon the rich prize.
Finding all his authority was lost
upon the Circassians girls, who stoutly refused to
be persuaded, he grew vicious.
Nothing was positively known, but
the tragedy which Jack and Harry Girdwood had witnessed
hard by the water-gate of the Konaki, coupled with
the recognition of the two eunuchs by Tinker as the
two assassins whom he and Bogey had capsized into
the water, made matters look altogether very suspicious
indeed.
The few threatening words which Osmond
had muttered to one of the fair Circassians, too,
should have told their own tale.
The Circassian girls had endeavoured
to screen those luckless negroes, Tinker and Bogey,
for had they not led the boys into the presence of
Osmond disguised as girls?
Here, then, was a pretext for further
ill-usage of the unfortunate slaves.
The girls were brought into the tyrant’s presence.
“Stand out, deceitful and faithless
slave,” he said, addressing one of the girls;
“you are accused of treason to the pasha, and
you know your fate.”
The girl addressed made no reply but
by a bold, defiant glance.
“You are to die,” said
Osmond, watching the effect of his words as he spoke.
The girls did not move nor utter a word.
“You know now my power,”
he went on to say in a low tone. “You have
one chance of life yet; would you know what that is?”
He waited for an answer.
He waited in vain.
The proud Circassian girls did not deign to notice
him.
“You remember what I told your
sister?” he said. “Reconsider what
I said, and it may not yet be too late.”
“We do not need to speak again,”
returned one of the girls. “What we have
already said is our resolve.”
“Death!” hissed the Turk, between his
teeth.
He eagerly watched for the terror his words should
have produced.
“Sooner death ten hundred times,”
returned the Circassian proudly, “than acknowledge
you for our master.”
“You have spoken,” exclaimed the Turk,
fiercely.
He struck a bell, and one of the armed eunuchs entered.
“Remove these slaves to the
cells as I told you; there they will remain until
nightfall. You understand me?”
The man placed his finger upon his
lip a sign of implicit obedience and
the Circassian slaves were removed to prison.
They were doomed.
Another tragedy was planned the
sequel to that which Harry Girdwood and young Jack
had witnessed almost as soon as they were upon the
Turkish coast.
The cord and sack were once more to play their part.
And could nothing avert their fate?
Their peril was extreme greater
even than that of the English lads and their faithful
followers, Tinker and Bogey.
“This is a pretty go,”
said Harry Girdwood, dolefully, as he looked round
him.
His tone was so grumpy, his look so
glum, that Jack could not refrain from laughing.
“Grumbling old sinner,”
said he; “you’re never satisfied.”
“Well, I like that,” said
Harry. “You get us into a precious hobble
through sheer wanton foolery, and then you expect me
to like it.”
“Now, don’t get waxy,” said Jack.
Tinker and Bogey did not understand the full extent
of their danger.
They sat at the further end of the
same chamber, grinning at their masters, and, if the
truth be told, rather enjoying the dilemma which they
were honoured by sharing with them.
Their masters would be sure to pull them all through
safely.
Such was their idea.
As soon as they had been left alone
in their prison, the boys had made a survey, and Jack
pronounced his opinion, and his determination with
the old air of confidence in himself.
“They’re treating us with something like
contempt, Harry,” he said.
“How so?”
“By not guarding us better than this,”
was the reply.
“I don’t quite see that,
Jack; the door would take us all our time to get through.”
“Perhaps,” returned Jack,
“but look at the window, and just tell me what
you think of that?”
The window, or perhaps we had better
have said hole in the wall for glass or
lattice there was none overlooked the sea.
They were in the part of the Konaki
known as the water pavilion.
There was a drop of thirty feet to the water.
Thirty feet.
Just think what thirty feet is.
About the height of a two-story dwelling house.
“Supposing we get through there,”
said Harry Girdwood, “we should never be able
to swim all the way out to a friendly ship.
“My dear old wet blanket,”
returned Jack, “I got you into this mess, and
I’ll get you out of it.”
“I hope so.”
They watched anxiously for a friendly ship.
At length their vigil was rewarded with success.
A big ship sailed into the bay with
the British colours flying at her masthead.
They almost shouted with joy at the sight.
“That’s a deuce of a way off,” said
Harry Girdwood.
“About a mile.”
“A mile is a precious good swim,” grunted
Harry.
“So much the better. These
villainous old Turks won’t be suspicious, and
a mile isn’t much for either of us, I think.
I don’t mind it, and we can answer for Tinker
and his prime minister.”
“Dat’s so,” said
Bogey, grinning from ear to ear. “Yah, yah!
Me and Tinker swim with Massa Harry and Jack on our
backs.”
At dusk they matured their plan of action.
Tinker could float on the water like
a cork, and was the swiftest swimmer of the four.
Tinker was, therefore, lowered as
far down as they could manage, and then allowed to
drop into the water.
It was a drop!
“Fought dis chile
was gwine on dropping for a week, sar,” said
the plucky young nigger, subsequently.
However, once he was on the surface,
and got his wind well, he darted through the water
like a fish.
They watched his dusky form until
they could see him no more.
“Now, Bogey.”
“Ready, sar.”
He was lowered and dropped the same
as Tinker, and speedily was upon the latter’s
track.
“Now my turn,” said Jack. “I
shall go in for a header.”
“Don’t,” said Harry.
“You’d never come up alive if you went
down head first from this height.”
And Jack was dissuaded from this purpose.
He squeezed his body through the aperture.
“Give me your hand, Harry, while I look over.”
His comrade obeyed, and Jack was able to see about
him.
Now on his left, not more than ten
feet down, was a large doorway, with a flap similar
to the doors on the water-side warehouses, in London,
from where the stores are lowered and raised from the
barges by means of an iron crane.
“I wonder what place that is?”
said Jack; “if I could only reach it, my fall
would be very considerably broken.”
He had a try.
They fastened their two scarves together,
and Harry, making himself a secure hold above, lowered
Jack, and the latter swinging backwards and forwards
twice, dropped the second time fairly on the ledge.
It was a perilous hold.
But Jack was only second to Nero in
monkey tricks, and he held on in a most tenacious
manner.
Swinging himself up he pushed his way into a dark
and gloomy place.
A low vaulted chamber, dimly lighted by a flickering
old lamp.
“Where am I now?”
Before he could look further to get
an answer to this question, he was startled by the
sound of footsteps.
What should he do?
Leap out?
Or should he wait?
He decided to wait.
He crept up into a corner, the darkest
he could find, and there, with a beating heart, he
awaited the progress of events.
He had not long to wait.
Two dusky forms glided spectrally into the place,
one bearing a lamp.
With this, they looked about, and
Jack, with a sinking at heart, recognised the two
eunuchs again.
“What devilment are they working now?”
thought Jack.
They flashed the light just then upon the objects
of their search.
Two huge sacks lay upon the floor.
Jack but imperfectly discerned what
they were; but a sickening dread stole over him, as
the two eunuchs raised one of the sacks from the floor,
and bearing it to the window, while its contents writhed
and struggled desperately, hurled it out.
A stifled groan.
A shriek.
A splash.
Jack could hear no more.
He was about to dart out from his
hiding-place upon those black-hearted wretches, when
a third person stepped into the chamber.
He said something to the two men a
few sharp words in an authoritative tone and
they retired.
Jack recognised the voice in an instant.
It was Osmond.
“What is he up to now?” muttered Jack,
to himself.
A scene of intense excitement followed.
The Turk unfastened the cord which
fastened the neck of the second sack, and dragged
it open.
Then, raising the sack on end, he
proceeded hastily to drag it down, revealing in the
dim light the well-remembered form of one of the Circassian
girls.
“Lolo,” said Osmond, “I come to
give you one last chance.”
“I defy and despise you!” said the girl.
“Reflect.”
“I have.”
“You know well, as I have seen
again and again by your looks, that I do not hate
you
“Would you have me love the murderer of my sister?”
“Silence, slave!”
“I fear not your menaces,”
retorted the brave girl; “you must have seen
that. The triumph is yours now mine
is to come.”
“When?”
“Hereafter. Murder is against
your creed as it is against mine. Do your worst.”
Jack listened.
Osmond seized the girl by the wrist.
But she twisted himself free from
his clutch without any particular effort.
Thereupon the Turk, with a growl of
rage, drew his sword, and would have cut her down.
But Jack could stand no more.
Bounding forward from his hiding-place,
he seized the uplifted hand and wrenched the sword
from his grasp.
Then, without a word, Jack struck
the man with the flat of his sword upon the back of
the head.
The Turk sank to the ground with a hollow groan.
It was all so momentary that the beautiful
Circassian girl looked on as one in a dream.
Hearing footsteps now, Jack ran to
the doorway and peered out.
“Quick!” exclaimed Jack.
“Lend me a hand, or we are lost.”
She could not understand his words,
but his meaning was plain enough.
They pulled the body into the sack
as quickly as possible.
Then they hastily tied the cord around the neck of
it.
This done, Jack extinguished the lamp.
There was no time to be lost.
He took the girl by the hand, and
pulled her back into the nook where he had been hiding,
just as the two villainous eunuchs entered the chamber.
The two eunuchs came slowly along the corridor.
Finding the place, as they thought,
deserted, they simply raised the sack from the ground,
thinking the body of the young Circassian girl was
in it, and bore it to the opening.
One swing and over it went.
As it fell, a hollow groan came from the sack.
The two men stared at each other aghast, and looked
over the opening.
But before they could utter a word,
a stealthy form had crept up behind them, and with
a vigorous drive, hurled them both over after the sack.
A wild, despairing yell, and the waters
closed over these wholesale butchers.