The ladies had been driving on, quite
unconscious of the neighborhood of any danger, admiring
the beauty of the scenery, and calling one another’s
attention to the various objects of interest which
from time to time became visible. Thus engaged,
they slowly ascended the incline already spoken of,
and began to enter the forest. They had not gone
far when the road took a sudden turn, and here a startling
spectacle burst upon their view.
The road on turning descended slightly
into a hollow. On the right arose a steep acclivity,
covered with the dense forest. On the other side
the ground rose more gradually, and was covered over
by a forest much less dense. Some distance in
front the road took another turn, and was lost to
view among the trees. About a hundred yards in
front of them a tree had been felled, and lay across
the way, barring their progress.
About twenty armed men stood before
them close by the place where the turn was. Among
them was a man on horseback. To their amazement,
it was Girasole.
Before the ladies could recover from
their astonishment two of the armed men advanced,
and the driver at once stopped the carriage.
Girasole then came forward.
“Miladi,” said he, “I haf de
honore of to invitar you to descend.”
“Pray what is the meaning of
this?” inquired Lady Dalrymple, with much agitation.
“It means dat I war wrong. Dere are brigand
on dis road.”
Lady Dalrymple said not another word.
The Count approached, and politely
offered his hand to assist the ladies out, but they
rejected it, and got out themselves. First Mrs.
Willoughby, then Ethel, then Lady Dalrymple, then Minnie.
Three of the ladies were white with utter horror,
and looked around in sickening fear upon the armed
men; but Minnie showed not even the slightest particle
of fear.
“How horrid!” she exclaimed.
“And now some one will come and save my life
again. It’s always the way.
I’m sure this isn’t my fault, Kitty
darling.”
Before her sister could say any thing
Girasole approached.
“Pardon, mees,” he said;
“but I haf made dis recepzion for you.
You sall be well treat. Do not fear. I lay
down my life.”
“Villain!” cried Lady
Dalrymple. “Arrest her at your peril.
Remember who she is. She has friends powerful
enough to avenge her if you dare to injure her.”
“You arra mistake,”
said Girasole, politely. “Se is mine, not
yours. I am her best fren. Se is fiancee
to me. I save her life tell her my
love make a proposezion. Se accept
me. Se is my fiancee. I was oppose by you.
What else sall I do? I mus haf her.
Se is mine. I am an Italiano nobile,
an’ I love her. Dere is no harm for any.
You mus see dat I haf de right. But for
me se would be dead.”
Lady Dalrymple was not usually excitable,
but now her whole nature was aroused; her eyes flashed
with indignation; her face turned red; she gasped
for breath, and fell to the ground. Ethel rushed
to assist her, and two of the maids came up.
Lady Dalrymple lay senseless.
With Mrs. Willoughby the result was
different. She burst into tears.
“Count Girasole,” she
cried, “oh, spare her! If you love her,
spare her. She is only a child. If we opposed
you, it was not from any objection to you; it was
because she is such a child.”
“You mistake,” said the
Count, shrugging his shoulders. “I love
her better than life. Se love me. It will
make her happy. You come too. You sall see
se is happy. Come. Be my sistaire.
It is love ”
Mrs. Willoughby burst into fresh tears
at this, and flung her arms around Minnie, and moaned
and wept.
“Well, now, Kitty darling, I
think it’s horrid. You’re never
satisfied. You’re always finding fault.
I’m sure if you don’t like Rufus K. Gunn,
you ”
But Minnie’s voice was interrupted
by the sound of approaching wheels. It was the
carriage of the Baron and his friend. The Baron
had feared brigands, but he was certainly not expecting
to come upon them so suddenly. The brigands had
been prepared, and as the carriage turned it was suddenly
stopped by the two carriages in front, and at once
was surrounded.
The Baron gave one lightning glance,
and surveyed the whole situation. He did not
move, but his form was rigid, and every nerve was braced,
and his eyes gleamed fiercely. He saw it all the
crowd of women, the calm face of Minnie, and the uncontrollable
agitation of Mrs. Willoughby.
“Well, by thunder!” he exclaimed.
Girasole rode up and called out:
“Surrender! You arra my prisoner.”
“What! it’s you, is it?”
said the Baron; and he glared for a moment with a
vengeful look at Girasole.
“Descend,” said Girasole. “You
mus be bound.”
“Bound? All right.
Here, parson, you jump down, and let them tie your
hands.”
The Baron stood up. The Reverend
Saul stood up too. The Reverend Saul began to
step down very carefully. The brigands gathered
around, most of them being on the side on which the
two were about to descend. The Reverend Saul
had just stepped to the ground. The Baron was
just preparing to follow. The brigands were impatient
to secure them, when suddenly, with a quick movement,
the Baron gave a spring out of the opposite side of
the carriage, and leaped to the ground. The brigands
were taken completely by surprise, and before they
could prepare to follow him, he had sprung into the
forest, and, with long bounds, was rushing up the
steep hill and out of sight.
One shot was fired after him, and
that was the shot that Hawbury and Dacres heard.
Two men sprang after him with the hope of catching
him.
In a few moments a loud cry was heard from the woods.
“MIN!”
Minnie heard it; a gleam of light
flashed from her eyes, a smile of triumph came over
her lips.
“Wha-a-a-a-t?” she called in reply.
“Wa-a-a-a-a-a-it!” was
the cry that came back and this was the
cry that Hawbury and Dacres had heard.
“Sacr-r-r-r-r-r-remento!” growled Girasole.
“I’m sure I don’t
know what he means by telling me that,” said
Minnie. “How can I wait if this horrid
Italian won’t let me? I’m sure he
might be more considerate.”
Poor Mrs. Willoughby, who had for
a moment been roused to hope by the escape of the
Baron, now fell again into despair, and wept and moaned
and clung to Minnie. Lady Dalrymple still lay
senseless, in spite of the efforts of Ethel and the
maids. The occurrence had been more to her than
a mere encounter with brigands. It was the thought
of her own carelessness that overwhelmed her.
In an instant the thought of the Baron’s warning
and his solemn entreaties flashed across her memory.
She recollected how Hawbury had commended his friend,
and how she had turned from these to put her trust
in the driver and Girasole, the very men who had betrayed
her. These were the thoughts that overwhelmed
her.
But now there arose once more the
noise of rolling wheels, advancing more swiftly than
the last, accompanied by the lash of a whip and shouts
of a human voice. Girasole spoke to his men, and
they moved up nearer to the bend, and stood in readiness
there.
What Hawbury’s motive was it
is not difficult to tell. He was not armed, and
therefore could not hope to do much; but he had in
an instant resolved to rush thus into the midst of
the danger. First of all he thought that a struggle
might be going on between the drivers, the other travelers,
and the brigands; in which event his assistance would
be of great value. Though unarmed, he thought
he might snatch or wrest a weapon from some one of
the enemy. In addition to this, he wished to
strike a blow to save the ladies from captivity, even
if his blow should be unavailing. Even if he
had known how matters were, he would probably have
acted in precisely the same way. As for Dacres,
he had but one idea. He was sure it was some
trick concocted by his wife and the Italian, though
why they should do so he did not stop, in his mad
mood, to inquire. A vague idea that a communication
had passed between them on the preceding evening with
reference to this was now in his mind, and his vengeful
feeling was stimulated by this thought to the utmost
pitch of intensity.
Hawbury thus lashed his horses, and
they flew along the road. After the first cry
and the shot that they had heard there was no further
noise. The stillness was mysterious. It showed
Hawbury that the struggle, if there had been any,
was over. But the first idea still remained both
in his own mind and in that of Dacres. On they
went, and now they came to the turn in the road.
Round this they whirled, and in an instant the scene
revealed itself.
Three carriages stopped; some drivers
standing and staring indifferently; a group of women
crowding around a prostrate form that lay in the road;
a pale, beautiful girl, to whom a beautiful woman was
clinging passionately; a crowd of armed brigands with
leveled pieces; and immediately before them a horseman the
Italian, Girasole.
One glance showed all this. Hawbury
could not distinguish any face among the crowd of
women that bent over Lady Dalrymple, and Ethel’s
face was thus still unrevealed; but he saw Minnie and
Mrs. Willoughby and Girasole.
“What the devil’s all
this about?” asked Hawbury, haughtily, as his
horses stopped at the Baron’s carriage.
“You are prisoners ” began
Girasole.
But before he could say another word
he was interrupted by a cry of fury from Dacres, who,
the moment that he had recognized him, sprang to his
feet, and with a long, keen knife in his hand, leaped
from the carriage into the midst of the brigands,
striking right and left, and endeavoring to force
his way toward Girasole. In an instant Hawbury
was by his side. Two men fell beneath the fierce
thrusts of Dacres’s knife, and Hawbury tore
the rifle from a third. With the clubbed end
of this he began dealing blows right and left.
The men fell back and leveled their pieces. Dacres
sprang forward, and was within three steps of Girasole his
face full of ferocity, his eyes flashing, and looking
not so much like an English gentleman as one of the
old vikings in a Berserker rage. One more
spring brought him closer to Girasole. The Italian
retreated. One of his men flung himself before
Dacres and tried to grapple with him. The next
instant he fell with a groan, stabbed to the heart.
With a yell of rage the others rushed upon Dacres;
but the latter was now suddenly seized with a new idea.
Turning for an instant he held his assailants at bay;
and then, seizing the opportunity, sprang into the
woods and ran. One or two shots were fired, and
then half a dozen men gave chase.
Meanwhile one or two shots had been
fired at Hawbury, but, in the confusion, they had
not taken effect. Suddenly, as he stood with
uplifted rifle ready to strike, his enemies made a
simultaneous rush upon him. He was seized by
a dozen strong arms. He struggled fiercely, but
his efforts were unavailing. The odds were too
great. Before long he was thrown to the ground
on his face, and his arms bound behind him. After
this he was gagged.
The uproar of this fierce struggle
had roused all the ladies, and they turned their eyes
in horror to where the two were fighting against such
odds. Ethel raised herself on her knees from beside
Lady Dalrymple, and caught sight of Hawbury.
For a moment she remained motionless; and then she
saw the escape of Dacres, and Hawbury going down in
the grasp of his assailants. She gave a loud shriek
and rushed forward. But Girasole intercepted
her.
“Go back,” he said.
“De milor is my prisoner. Back, or you will
be bound.”
And at a gesture from him two of the
men advanced to seize Ethel.
“Back!” he said, once
more, in a stern voice. “You mus be
tentif to miladi.”
Ethel shrank back.
The sound of that scream had struck
on Hawbury’s ears, but he did not recognize
it. If he thought of it at all, he supposed it
was the scream of common terror from one of the women.
He was sore and bruised and fast bound. He was
held down also in such a way that he could not see
the party of ladies. The Baron’s carriage
intercepted the view, for he had fallen behind this
during the final struggle. After a little time
he was allowed to sit up, but still he could not see
beyond.
There was now some delay, and Girasole
gave some orders to his men. The ladies waited
with fearful apprehensions. They listened eagerly
to hear if there might not be some sounds of approaching
help. But no such sounds came to gladden their
hearts. Lady Dalrymple, also, still lay senseless;
and Ethel, full of the direst anxiety about Hawbury,
had to return to renew her efforts toward reviving
her aunt.
Before long the brigands who had been
in pursuit of the fugitives returned to the road.
They did not bring back either of them. A dreadful
question arose in the minds of the ladies as to the
meaning of this. Did it mean that the fugitives
had escaped, or had been shot down in the woods by
their wrathful pursuers? It was impossible for
them to find out. Girasole went over to them and
conversed with them apart. The men all looked
sullen; but whether that arose from disappointed vengeance
or gratified ferocity it was impossible for them to
discern.
The brigands now turned their attention
to their own men. Two of these had received bad
but not dangerous wounds from the dagger of Dacres,
and the scowls of pain and rage which they threw upon
Hawbury and the other captives boded nothing but the
most cruel fate to all of them. Another, however,
still lay there. It was the one who had intercepted
Dacres in his rush upon Girasole. He lay motionless
in a pool of blood. They turned him over.
His white, rigid face, as it became exposed to view,
exhibited the unmistakable mark of death, and a gash
on his breast showed how his fate had met him.
The brigands uttered loud cries, and
advanced toward Hawbury. He sat regarding them
with perfect indifference. They raised their rifles,
some clubbing them, others taking aim, swearing and
gesticulating all the time like maniacs.
Hawbury, however, did not move a muscle
of his face, nor did he show the slightest feeling
of any kind. He was covered with dust, and his
clothes were torn and splashed with mud, and his hands
were bound, and his mouth was gagged; but he preserved
a coolness that astonished his enemies. Had it
not been for this coolness his brains might have been
blown out in which case this narrative would
never have been written; but there was something in
his look which made the Italians pause, gave Girasole
time to interfere, and thus preserved my story from
ruin.
Girasole then came up and made his
men stand back. They obeyed sullenly.
Girasole removed the gag.
Then he stood and looked at Hawbury.
Hawbury sat and returned his look with his usual nonchalance,
regarding the Italian with a cold, steady stare, which
produced upon the latter its usual maddening effect.
“Milor will be ver glad
to hear,” said he, with a mocking smile, “dat
de mees will be take good care to. Milor was attentif
to de mees; but de mees haf been fiancee to me, an’
so I take dis occazione to mak her mine.
I sall love her, an’ se sall love me.
I haf save her life, an’ se haf been fiancee
to me since den.”
Now Girasole had chosen to say this
to Hawbury from the conviction that Hawbury was Minnie’s
lover, and that the statement of this would inflict
a pang upon the heart of his supposed rival which would
destroy his coolness. Thus he chose rather to
strike at Hawbury’s jealousy than at his fear
or at his pride.
But he was disappointed. Hawbury
heard his statement with utter indifference.
“Well,” said he, “all
I can say is that it seems to me to be a devilish
odd way of going to work about it.”
“Aha!” said Girasole,
fiercely. “You sall see. Se sall be
mine. Aha!”
Hawbury made no reply, and Girasole,
after a gesture of impatience, walked off, baffled.
In a few minutes two men came up to
Hawbury, and led him away to the woods on the left.