A RESCUE AND A SIEGE
The woman stared at him in wild amazement.
That she was free temporarily at least, could not
be gainsaid. Her captors had not seen fit to
bind her and she now stood absolutely untouched by
anyone. The shooting, the fighting, had confused
her. She had only seen Marteau as an accomplice
and friend of her assailants, she had no clew to his
apparent change of heart. She did not know whether
she had merely exchanged masters or what had happened.
Smiling ironically at her bewilderment, which he
somehow resented in his heart, Marteau proceeded to
further explanation.
“You are free, mademoiselle,”
he repeated emphatically, bowing before her.
“But I thought -”
“Did you think that I could
be allied with such cowardly thieves and vagabonds
as those?”
“But you said -”
“It was simply a ruse.
Could you imagine that one of my family, that I,
should fail in respect and devotion to one of yours,
to you? I determined to free you the instant
I saw you.”
“And will you not complete your
good work?” broke out the man tied to the chair
in harsh and foreign but sufficiently comprehensible
French, “by straightway releasing me, young
sir?”
“But who is this?”
“This is Sir Gervaise Yeovil,”
answered Mademoiselle Laure, “my attorney, an
English officer-of-the-law, of Lord Castlereagh’s
suite, who came with me from Chatillon to get certain
papers and -”
“Why all this bother and explanation?”
burst out Sir Gervaise. “Tell him to cut
these lashes and release me from this cursed bondage,”
he added in English.
“That is quite another matter,
sir,” said Marteau gravely. “I regret
that you are an enemy and that I can not -”
“But we are not enemies, Monsieur,”
cried one of the officers, who had just succeeded
in working a gag out of his mouth. “We
are Russian officers of the Imperial Guard and since
you have deserted the cause of the Corsican you will -”
“Deserted!” thundered
Marteau, his pale face flaming. “That was
as much a ruse as the other.”
“What, then, do you mean by
wearing a Russian coat over your uniform and -”
“He is a spy. He shall
be hanged,” said the other, also freeing himself
of his gag.
“Indeed,” laughed Marteau.
“And do you gentlemen ask me to release you
in order that you may hang me?”
“I won’t hang you,”
burst out the Englishman. “On the contrary,
I’ll give you fifty pounds if you’ll cut
these cords and -”
Marteau shook his head.
“Countess,” bellowed Yeovil
angrily, “there’s a knife on the table
yonder, pray do you -”
The young woman made a swift step
in that direction, but the Frenchman was too quick
for her.
“Pardon me, mademoiselle, I
beg that the first use you make of your new life be
not to aid my enemies.”
“Your enemies, Marteau?”
“The enemies of France, then.”
“Not my uncle’s France,” said the
girl.
“But your father’s, and I had hoped yours.”
“No, no.”
“In any event, these gentlemen
must remain bound for the time being. No harm
shall come to you from me,” continued Marteau,
addressing the two officers. “But as for
these hounds -” He stepped
over to the two Cossacks, who lay mute. He bent
over them with such a look of rage, ruthless determination
and evil purpose in his face as startled the woman
into action.
“Monsieur!” she cried,
stepping over to him and striving to interpose between
him and the two men. “Marteau, what would
you do?”
“My sister-dead in
the cottage yonder after-after -”
he choked out. He stopped, his fingers twitching.
“My old father! If I served them right
I would pitch them into yonder fireplace or torture
them, the dogs, the cowards!”
“My friend,” said the
young Countess gently, laying her hand on his arm.
Marteau threw up his hands, that touch
recalled him to his senses.
“I will let them alone for the
present,” he said. “Meanwhile -”
He seized the dead man and dragged the body out of
sight behind the tables.
“Will monsieur give a thought
to me?” came another voice from the dim recesses
of a far corner.
“And who are you?” asked
Marteau, lifting the light and staring.
“A Frenchman, sir. They
knocked me on the head and left me for dead, but if
monsieur would assist me I -”
Marteau stepped over to him, bent
down and lifted him up. He was a stout, hardy
looking peasant boy, pale cheeked, with blood clotted
around his forehead from a blow that he had received.
Feverish fire sparkled in his eyes.
“If monsieur wishes help to
put these brutes out of the way command me,”
he said passionately.
“We will do nothing with them
at present,” answered Marteau.
“Quick, Laure, the knife,” whispered the
Englishman.
The Frenchman heard him, however, and wheeled around.
“Mademoiselle,” he cried,
“on your honor I charge you not to abuse the
liberty I have secured for you and that I allow you.”
“But, my friends -”
“If you had depended on your
friends you would even now be -”
he paused-“as my sister,” he
added with terrific intensity.
“Your pleasure shall be mine,” said the
young woman.
“If I could have a drink of
wine!” said the young peasant, sinking down
into a chair.
“There is a flask which they
did not get in the pocket of one of the officers yonder,”
said the young Frenchwoman, looking sympathetically
at the poor exhausted lad.
Marteau quickly recovered it, in spite
of the protestations of the officer, who looked his
indignation at this little betrayal by the woman.
He gave some of it to the peasant and then offered
it to mademoiselle and, upon her declining it, took
a long drink himself. He was weak and trembling
with all he had gone through.
“Now, what’s to be our
further course?” asked the countess.
“I don’t know yet. I -”
But the answer was never finished.
Shots, cries, the sound of galloping horses came
faintly through the open door.
“My men returning!” cried
the Russian officer triumphantly. “Our
turn will come now, sir.”
Two courses were open. To run
or to fight. Duty said go; love said stay.
Duty was stronger. After a moment’s hesitation
Marteau dashed for the door. He was too late.
The returning Russian cavalry was already entering
the courtyard. Fate had decided against him.
He could not go now. He thought with the swiftness
of a veteran. He sprang back into the hall,
threw the great iron-bound door into its place, turned
the massive key in its lock, thanking God that key
and lock were still intact, dropped the heavy bars
at top and bottom that further secured it, just as
the first horseman thundered upon the door.
In his rapid passage through the house
the young Frenchman had noticed that all the windows
were shuttered and barred, that only the front door
appeared to have been opened. He was familiar
with the chateau. He knew how carefully its openings
had been secured and how often his father had inspected
them, to keep out brigands, the waifs and strays,
the wanderers, the low men of the countryside.
For the moment he was safe with his prisoners, one
man and a boy guarding a score of men and one woman,
and holding a chateau against a hundred and fifty soldiers!
Fortunately, there would be no cannon with that troop
of cavalry, there were no cannon in that wagon train,
so that they could not batter down the chateau over
his head. What his ultimate fate would be he
could not tell. Could he hold that castle indefinitely?
If not, what? How he was to get away and reach
Napoleon with his vital news he could not see.
There must be some way, however. Well, whatever
was to be would be, and meanwhile he could only wait
developments and hold on.
The troopers outside were very much
astonished to find the heavy door closed and the two
sentries dead on the terrace. They dismounted
from their horses at the foot of the terrace and crowded
about the door, upon which they beat with their pistols,
at the same time shouting the names and titles of
the officers within. Inside the great hall Marteau
had once more taken command. In all this excitement
Laure d’Aumenier had stood like a stone, apparently
indifferent to the appeals of the four bound men on
the floor and the Englishman in the chair that she
cut the ropes with which they were bound, while the
French officer was busy at the door. Perhaps
that young peasant might have prevented her, but as
a matter of fact, she made no attempt to answer their
pleas. She stood waiting and watching.
Just as Marteau reentered the room the chief Russian
officer shouted out a command. From where he
lay on the floor his voice did not carry well and
there was too much tumult outside for anyone to hear.
In a second Marteau was over him.
“If you open your mouth again,
monsieur,” he said fiercely, “I shall
have to choose between gagging and killing you, and
I incline to the latter. And these other gentlemen
may take notice. You, what are you named?”
“Pierre Lebois, sir,” answered the peasant.
“Can you fire a gun?”
“Give me a chance,” answered
the young fellow. “I’ve got people
dead, yonder, to avenge.”
The brigands had left the swords and
pistols of the officers on chairs, tables and the
floor. There were eight pistols. Marteau
gathered them up. The English baronet yielded
one other, a huge, heavy, old-fashioned weapon.
“There are loopholes in the
shutters yonder,” said the officer. “Do
you take that one, I will take the other. They
will get away from the door in a moment and as soon
as you can see them fire.”
“Mademoiselle,” said the
Russian officer desperately, “I shall have to
report to the commander of the guard and he to the
Czar that you gave aid and comfort to our enemies.”
“But what can I do?” asked
the young woman. “Monsieur Marteau could
certainly shoot me if I attempted -”
“Assuredly,” said Marteau,
smiling at her in a way anything but fierce.
It was that implicit trust in her
that restrained her and saved him. As a girl
the young countess had been intensely fond of Jean
Marteau. He certainly appeared well in his present
rôle before her. In the revulsion of feeling
in finding him not a bully, not a traitor, but a devoted
friend and servitor, he advanced higher in her estimation
than ever before. Besides, the young woman was
by no means so thoroughgoing a loyalist as her old
uncle, for instance.
“I can see them now, monsieur,”
said the young peasant from the peep-hole in the shutter.
Indeed, the men outside had broken
away from the door, groups were running to and fro
seeking lights and some other entrance. Taking
aim at the nearest Marteau pulled the trigger and
Pierre followed his example. The noise of the
explosions was succeeded by a scream of anguish, one
man was severely wounded and another killed.
Something mysterious had happened while they had been
off on the wild goose chase apparently, the Russians
decided. The chateau had been seized, their
officers had been made way with, it was held by the
enemy.
“They can’t be anything
more than wandering peasants,” cried an imperious
voice in Russian outside. “I thought you
had made thorough work with them all, Scoref,”
continued the speaker. “Your Cossacks
must have failed to complete the job.”
“It will be the first time,”
answered Scoref, the hetman of the raiders.
“Look, the village burns!”
“Well, what’s to be done now?” said
the first voice.
“I don’t know, Baron,”
was the answer. “Besieging castles is more
in your line than in mine.”
“Shall we fire again, monsieur?” asked
Pierre within.
“No,” was the answer.
“Remember we’ve only got eight shots and
we must wait.”
“Let us have lights,”
cried the commander of the squadron. “Here,
take one of those wagons and -”
In a few moments a bright fire was
blazing in the courtyard.
“The shots came from those windows,”
continued the Russian. “Keep out of the
way and - Isn’t that a window
open up there?”
“It is, it is!” came the answer from a
dozen throats.
All the talk being in Russian was,
of course, not understood by the two Frenchmen.
“One of you climb up there,”
continued the Russian. “You see the spout,
and the coping, that buttress? Ten roubles to
the man who does it.”
A soldier sprang forward. Those
within could hear his heavy body rub along the wall.
They did not know what he was doing or what was toward.
They were in entire ignorance that a shutter had become
detached from its hinges in the room above the drawing-room
and that they would soon have to face an attack from
the rear. The man who climbed fancied himself
perfectly secure, and indeed he was from those within.
It was a hard climb, but presently he reached the
window-ledge. His hands clasped it, he made a
brave effort, drew himself up and on the instant from
beyond the wagons came a pistol shot. The man
shrieked, released his hold and fell crashing to the
ground. The besiegers broke into wild outcries.
Some of them ran in the direction whence the shot
had come. They thought they caught the glimpse
of a figure running away in the darkness. Pistols
were fired and the vicinity was thoroughly searched,
but they found nothing.
The shot, the man’s cry overhead,
the body crashing down to the ground, enlightened
Marteau. He handed Pierre two of the six remaining
pistols, told him to run to the floor above and watch
the window. The young peasant crossed himself
and turned away. He found the room easily enough.
It was impossible to barricade the window, but he
drew back in the darkness and waited.
Having found no one in the grove beyond
the baggage-wagons, the Russians called for another
volunteer and a second man offered. Pierre heard
him coming, permitted him to gain the ledge and then
thrust the pistol in his face and pulled the trigger.
At the same time a big Cossack coming within easy
range and standing outlined between the loophole and
the fire, Marteau gave him his second bullet, with
fatal effect. There flashed into his mind that
the shot which had come so opportunely from outside
bespoke the arrival of his friend, the grenadier.
He hoped the man would have sense enough to go immediately
to Sezanne and report the situation. If he could
maintain the defense of the castle for two hours he
might be rescued. He stepped to the hall and
called up to Pierre. Receiving a cheery reply
to the effect that all was well and that he would
keep good watch, he came back into the great hall
and resumed his ward.