HOW MARTEAU WON THE CROSS
For a long time the besiegers had
given little evidence of their presence. Through
the loop-holes in the shutters fires could be seen
burning, figures coming and going. They were
busy about something, but just what was not apparent.
They had been unmolested by the defenders. Marteau
had but three pistols and therefore three shots left.
Pierre, upstairs, had but one. To kill one
or two more Russians would not have bettered their
condition. The pistols should be saved for a
final emergency. He had called up to Pierre
and had cautioned him. There was nothing to
do but to wait.
From time to time the silence was
broken by snatches of conversation. As, for instance,
the Countess Laure, observing that Marteau wore upon
his breast the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor,
thus began,
“You wear a great decoration
for a simple -” She stopped
awkwardly.
“For a simple peasant you were
about to say, mademoiselle,” answered Marteau,
smiling with a little touch of scorn. “In
France to-day even a simple peasant may deserve and
receive the favor of the Emperor.”
“I am sure that you are worthy
of whatever distinction you may have achieved, monsieur,”
said the Countess gently, grieved at her lack of consideration
and anxious to make amends. “And as one
who takes pride in all associated with her ancient
house will you tell me how you got that?”
“It was at Leipsic.”
“Ah, we beat you there,” said one Russian
meaningly.
“Yes,” said Marteau.
“Perhaps after having seen your backs so many
times we could afford to turn ours upon you once.”
“I was there,” said the other Russian
triumphantly.
“Were you also at Friedland,
at Eylau, at Borodino, at -”
began Marteau angrily.
“Gentlemen!” said the Countess.
“Forgive, mademoiselle,”
said the Frenchman quickly. “I, at least,
will not fight our battles over in the presence of
a woman.”
“But the cross?”
“It was nothing. I saved an eagle.
The Emperor bestowed it on me.”
“Tell me about it.”
“I was on the bridge at Leipsic
when it was blown up by that fatal mistake.
The Port-Aigle was torn to pieces. The Colonel
seized the Eagle as it fell from his hand. I
was next to him-afoot. A storm of
bullets swept over the river. As the Colonel
on his horse was pushed over the parapet by the flying
fugitives a shot struck him. He had just strength
enough to gasp out, ‘Save the Eagle’ as
he was swept away. I was lucky enough to catch
the staff-a bullet had broken it-I
seized the upper half with the Eagle and the flag which
had almost been shot to pieces during the battle-the
Fifth-of-the-Line had done its full duty that day-and
I swam with it toward the bank. Really, mademoiselle,
any soldier would have done as well. I only happened
to be there.”
“Go on, monsieur, I wish to hear everything.”
“At your pleasure, then,”
said Marteau reluctantly, continuing his story.
“The river was filled with men
and horses. Marshal Poniatowski was near me.
He had been wounded, and guided his swimming horse
with his left hand. The current was swift.
We were swept down the stream. A cavalryman
next to me was shot from his horse. He fell over
upon me. I was forced under water a moment.
Another horse, swimming frantically, struck my shoulder
with his hoof, fortunately it was the left one.
My arm was broken. I seized the tatters of the
flag in my teeth-you know I am an expert
swimmer, mademoiselle?”
“I know it,” answered
the girl, her eyes gleaming at the recital. “Have
you forgot the day when, disregarding your warnings,
I fell into the river and was swept away and how you
plunged in and brought me to the shore and never told
my father?”
“I have not forgot,” said
the young officer simply, “but it was not for
me to remind you.”
“And I have not forgot, either.
But continue the story,” said the young Countess,
her eyes shining, her breath coming quicker, as she
listened to the gallant tale so modestly set forth.
“With my right arm I swam as
best I could. There was a horse nearby which
had lost his rider. I grasped the saddle horn.
Somehow I managed to reach the shore with the Eagle.
I clambered up the bank, slippery with water and
with blood, mademoiselle. The Russians were
firing at us from the town. A bullet struck me.”
“Where?”
“I am ashamed to say, in the
back,” said the soldier, flushing at the recollection.
“But if I had stood up and faced them the Eagle
would have been lost.”
The Russian laughed scornfully.
“In the back,” he cried meaningly, “a
fine place for a soldier!”
“Shame,” said the Countess quickly.
“If I had faced them,”
returned the French soldier simply, “I should
have been shot in the breast and killed, perhaps, but
I should have lost the Eagle. It was my business
to save the Eagle at all hazards, even though I should
be branded with cowardice for having done so,”
he went on hotly.
“I understand,” said the
Countess. “I, who have known you from a
child, know that you are a brave man, monsieur.
Proceed.”
“I staggered up the bank.
Fortune had brought me to the place where the Emperor
stood watching. There were staff officers about
him. Oh, very few. The slaughter had been
dreadful, the confusion was inconceivable, mademoiselle.
They made way for me. How well I remember the
whole scene,” continued the young Frenchman.
“The Emperor stood a little apart, his face
pale, his head bent. He was frowning and whistling.”
“Whistling! Damme,”
burst out Sir Gervaise Yeovil, deeply interested in
the unpretentious account of so heroic a deed.
“What was he whistling?”
“Malbrook-s’en-va-t’en-guerre.”
“By gad,” roared the Englishman.
“Marlborough beat you. Just wait until
we come in touch with you.”
“There was no Napoleon there,”
observed Marteau simply, as if that were adequate
answer.
“Napoleon or no Napoleon, wait until Wellington -”
“We shall wait.”
“Pardon, Monsieur Yeovil,”
said the Countess, “will you not allow Monsieur
Marteau to proceed?”
“There is little more to tell,
mademoiselle. The Emperor saw me come up.
I was wet, my arm hung useless, the bullet had gone
through my body. There was blood on my uniform
coat. I thought that I was dying, that my end
was at hand. My strength was ebbing. I
concentrated all my will and power. Holding
the Eagle, I lifted it up in salute. ’What
have we here?’ cried the Emperor, fixing his
glance upon me. ‘Lieutenant Marteau,’
I answered. His voice came to me as in a dream
and my own voice sounded far away. ‘Of
what regiment?’ ’The Fifth-of-the-Line,
Sire.’ ‘You have saved the Eagle.’
‘Yes, Sire,’ I replied. And then
consciousness left me. As I fell I heard the
Emperor say, ‘See that he gets the Legion of
Honor if he survives.’ People caught me
in their arms. When I woke up I was in France.
Here, at Aumenier, in my father’s house.”
Young Marteau did not add to his story
that, as he fell, he heard the Emperor, deeply moved,
exclaim:
“With such men what resources does not France
possess?”
“And did the Emperor give you the cross?”
eagerly asked the girl.
“It was forgot until a few days
since. When I recovered I rejoined the regiment.
To take the duty of an officer suddenly ill I happened
to be stationed on service near the Emperor at Nogent.
When others were urging him to make terms, I, though
a young soldier, ventured to express myself to the
contrary.”
“And then?”
“His Majesty pardoned the liberty,
recognized me, gave me his own cross, made me a Major
on his staff.”
“And the Eagle?”
“It is still carried at the head of what remains
of the
Fifth-of-the-Line,” said the young man proudly.
“When we have taken your Emperor
we will do away with those Eagles, and after we restore
her rightful king to France we shall give her back
her ancient flag of golden lilies,” said the
Russian.
“Precisely,” said Marteau
sharply. “When you have taken the Emperor
you may do all that. The men who have made France
so great under him will care little what you do, monsieur,
under such circumstances.”
“And why will they be so indifferent,
Monsieur Jean?” asked the Countess curiously.
“They will be dead, mademoiselle,
and their Emperor, too, unless God preserve his life
for some future use.”
“Happy,” said the young
girl, “is the man who can inspire such devotion,
monsieur. Although I have been trained differently
I think that -”
What the Countess thought was never
said for at that instant the door at the farther end
of the great room was thrown open suddenly with a
violent crash, and into the apartment came crowding
the score of villains and scoundrels who had been
imprisoned below stairs. They had managed to
break out in some way and had returned to the great
hall to seize again their captives and to wreak their
vengeance upon their betrayer. They had got
at the wine and were inflamed with drink as well as
revenge and savage passion. They had realized,
of course, that some enemies were outside but they
had not clearly grasped the situation. All they
thought of at the time were the people in the great
hall. They came crowding through the big doorway,
several of them handling pistols and all of them shouting
savage and fearsome cries of revenge and triumph.
Instantly the pistols were presented,
the triggers pressed and half a dozen bullets swept
through the room. Marteau had seen the first
movement of the door. He had divined what had
happened. Before the pistols had been leveled
he was by the side of the Countess. The table
at which she sat was a huge and heavy one. With
one movement he hurled her, chair and all, to the
floor, with the other he threw the table on its side
in front of her. One of the bullets grazed his
cheek, the others swept harmlessly through the room.
He seized from another table two of his remaining
pistols and discharged them squarely into the face
of the crowding mass at the other end of the room at
point-blank range. The sounds of the shots still
echoed when he cried out:
“The knife, Countess.
Cut the bonds of the prisoners. We must fight
here for our lives and your honor.”
The Countess Laure was quick to understand.
“You are safe now. They
have no more shots. Hasten,” he urged,
reaching down a hand and assisting her to her feet.
He clutched the barrels of his pistols
thereafter and hurled them directly into the faces
of the infuriated men. Five of them were down
and his prompt action had given the people in the room
a little respite.
“Gentlemen,” cried Marteau,
sweeping out his sword and stepping into the open
space between the prisoners and the overturned table
on one hand and the renegades on the other, “quick,
take your swords for the honor of the Countess and
for your lives.”
The man who led the renegades had
some idea of military tactics. He spoke a few
sharp words and half a dozen of them backed out of
the room, entered the outer hall and ran around to
the door on the side of the apartment which gave access
to the great hall. The little band of defenders
retreated into a corner near the fireplace, which was
raised a step or two above the floor of the room.
Meanwhile Laure had cut the lashings
of the Russians, the Cossacks, and the Englishman.
They staggered to their feet numb from their long
bondage, but inspired by the frightful imminence of
their peril they seized their swords and presented
a bold front to the two-sided enemy. There was
one pistol left charged. Marteau handed that
to the girl.
“The last shot, mademoiselle,”
he said meaningly, “for yourself if -”
“I understand.”
“If you could only get to the
door,” growled the Russian commander, “my
men outside would make short work of -”
“It is impossible until we have
dealt with these villains,” said Marteau.
“On guard!” he cried as the marauders
suddenly leaped forward.
The big Englishman, burly, tremendously
powerful for all his advancing years, dropped his
sword for a moment, picked up one of the heavy oak
chairs and hurled it full into the face of the larger
body at the further end of the room. One stumbled
over it, two others fell. The next moment both
parties were upon the little group. In their
haste, in their drunken excitement, the marauders
had not thought to recharge their pistols. With
swords, scythes and clubs they fell on the six men.
Their numbers worked to their disadvantage.
Three of the men surrounding the woman, the Frenchman
and the two Russian guardsmen, were accomplished swordsmen.
The Cossacks were not to be disdained in rough-and-tumble
fighting and the Englishman was a valiant ally.
Their racial antagonisms were forgot in their common
danger and the deadly peril of the woman.
The swords of the soldiers flashed
as they thrust and parried. The Cossacks, less
skillful, strove to beat down the attackers by sweeping
slashes-not the best method for such close
fighting. One Cossack was pierced through the
breast by a thrust from a renegade and another was
cut from his neck almost to his heart by a blow from
a scythe. One of the Russian officers was wounded,
fell to his knees and was dispatched. The Englishman
was hit by a billet of wood and dazed. Marteau
and the other Russian were still unharmed. But
it was going hard with them. In fact, a fierce
blow on his blade from a bludgeon shivered the weapon
of the Frenchman. A sword was aimed at his heart.
There was a blinding flash, a detonation, and the
man who held it staggered back. The Countess,
the last pistol almost touching the man’s body,
had pulled the trigger. Marteau seized the sword
of the man who had menaced him. The next instant
the chateau was shaken by a terrific roar. The
Russians outside having constructed a rude bomb had
blown up the door.
For a second the combat ceased.
The hall was full of smoke. From outside came
shots, shrieks, cries, loud curses and groans, cheers,
French and Russian voices, the galloping of horses,
words of command. The French were there.
“To me,” shouted Marteau
at the top of his voice. “France!”
The first to heed the call was young
Pierre. He descended the hall, watched the conflict
a moment and, having possessed himself of a club,
battered down the man nearest him, unsuspecting an
attack from the rear, then ranged himself by the side
of the surviving Russian and the Frenchman.
He did not come through scathless, however, for one
of the renegades cut him fiercely as he passed.
He stood erect by an effort of will but it was evident
he could now add little to the defense. The
Russian took the pistol from his hand. The next
second the great hall was filled with shouting figures
of soldiers. Into the smoke and confusion of
the room came Napoleon.