IN WHICH LANCEY IS TRIED, SUSPECTED,
BLOWN UP, CAPTURED, HALF-HANGED, DELIVERED, AND ASTONISHED
We must turn now to poor Lancey, from
whom I parted in the waters of the Danube, but with
whose fate and doings I did not become acquainted until
long afterwards.
As I had anticipated, he missed the
vessel of the Turkish flotilla towards which he had
struck out, but fortunately succeeded in grappling
the chain cable of that which lay next to it, and the
crew of which, as the reader will recollect, I had
roused by a shout in passing.
Lancey soon let the Turks know where
he was. A boat being lowered, he was taken on
board, but it was clear to him that he was regarded
with much suspicion. They hurried him before
the officer in charge of the deck, who questioned
him closely. The poor fellow now found that his
knowledge of the Turkish language was much slighter
than, in the pride of his heart, while studying with
me, he had imagined. Not only did he fail to
understand what was said to him, but the dropping of
h’s and the introduction of r’s in wrong
places rendered his own efforts at reply abortive.
In these circumstances one of the sailors who professed
to talk English was sent for.
This man, a fine stalwart Turk, with
a bushy black beard, began his duties as interpreter
with the question
“Hoosyoo?”
“Eh? say that again,” said Lancey, with
a perplexed look.
“Hoosyoo?” repeated the Moslem, with emphasis.
“Hoosyoo,” repeated Lancey
slowly. “Oh, I see,” (with a smile
of sudden intelligence,) “who’s you?
Just so. I’m Jacob Lancey, groom in the
family of Mrs Jeff Childers, of Fagend, in the county
of Devonshire, England.”
This having been outrageously misunderstood
by the Turk, and misinterpreted to the officer, the
next question was
“Wessyoocumfro?”
“Wessyoocumfro?”
Again Lancey repeated the word, and
once more, with a smile of sudden intelligence, exclaimed,
“Ah, I see: w’ere’s you come
from? Well, I last come from the water, ‘avin’
previously got into it through the hupsettin’
of our boat.”
Lancey hereupon detailed the incident
which had left him and me struggling in the water,
but the little that was understood by the Turks was
evidently not believed; and no wonder, for by that
time the Russians had been laying down torpedoes in
all directions about the Danube, to prevent the enemy
from interfering with their labours at the pontoon
bridges. The Turkish sailors were thus rendered
suspicious of every unusual circumstance that came
under their notice. When, therefore, a big,
powerful, and rather odd-looking man was found clinging
to one of their cables, they at once set him down
as an unsuccessful torpedoist, and a careful search
was instantly made round the vessel as a precaution.
Meanwhile Lancey was led rather roughly
down to the cabin to be questioned by the captain.
The cabin, although very luxurious
in its fittings, was not so richly ornate as had been
anticipated by the English groom, whose conceptions
of everything had been derived from the Arabian Nights’
Entertainments, or rather from a fanciful imagination
fed by that romantic work. The appearance of
the Turkish captain, however, and the brightly-coloured
costume of an officer who sat by his side, were sufficiently
striking and Oriental.
On Lancey being placed before him,
the captain turned and said a few words to the officer
at his side, who was a splendid fellow, in the prime
of life, with a square bony frame and red beard, which
harmonised, if it did not contrast, with his scarlet
fez and blue tassel. A rich Eastern shawl encircled
his waist, from the folds of which peeped the handles
of a brace of pistols.
He looked at the dripping Englishman
earnestly and sternly for a few moments, and the slightest
tinge of a smile lighted his grave countenance as
he said in broken, but sufficiently fluent English
“The captin do want you to repeat
vat you have say on deck.”
Lancey repeated it, with a considerable
number of additions, but no variations.
After translating it all, and listening
to something in reply, the officer turned again to
Lancey.
“The captin,” he said,
with quiet gravity, “bids me tell to you that
you is a liar.”
Lancey flushed deeply. “I
would tell you,” he said, with a frown,
“to tell the captain that ’e’s another,
on’y that would show I was as bad-mannered as
’imself.”
“If I do tells him zat,”
returned the officer, “you should have your
head cutted off immediately.”
Lancey’s indignation having
already half-cooled, and his memory being refreshed
just then with some vivid remembrances of the Eastern
mode of summoning black slaves by the clapping of
hands, followed by the flying off of heads or the
prompt application of bowstrings to necks, he said,
still however with an offended air
“Well then, tell ’im what
you like, hall I’ve got to say is that I’ve
told the plain truth, an’ ’e’s welcome
to believe it or not as ’e likes.”
Without the slightest change in his
grave countenance, or his appearing in the least degree
offended by Lancey’s free-and-easy manner, the
red-bearded officer again turned to address the captain.
Lancey now observed that the latter replied with
a degree of deferential respect which seemed unnatural
in mere brother officers.
“You is regarded as a spy,”
said the red-beard, turning once more to Lancey, and
fixing his cold grey eye intently on him, as if to
read his thoughts.
“No, I ain’t a spy,”
returned the unfortunate man, somewhat bitterly, “nor
never mean to be. ’Ang me if you like.
I’ve nothink more to say.”
Neither the captain nor the red-bearded
officer replied, but the former waved his hand, and
the two sailors who had led Lancey to the cabin again
seized him and led him away, more roughly than before.
The free spirit of my poor servant resented this
unnecessary rudeness, and he felt a strong inclination
to fight, but discretion, or some faint remembrance
of scimitars and bowstrings, induced him to submit.
Full well did he know what was the
fatal doom of a spy, and a sinking of the heart came
over him as he thought of immediate execution.
At the very least, he counted on being heavily ironed
and thrust into the darkest recesses of the hold.
Great, then, was his surprise when the man who had
at first acted as interpreter took him below and supplied
him with a dry shirt and a pair of trousers.
Thankfully accepting these, and standing
between two guns, he put them on.
“Who is the hofficer with the
red beard?” he asked, while thus engaged.
The interpreter seemed unwilling to
answer at first, but, on a repetition of the question
replied
“Pasha.”
“Pasha, eh? Ah, that accounts
for the respect of the cap’n rather
shorter in the legs these ’ere than I could ’ave
wished; ’owever, beggars, they say, mustn’t
be well, they’re wide enough anyhow. A
Pasha, is ’e? Don’t look like a sailor,
though. Is ’e a sailor?”
“No,” replied the interpreter sharply.
“Well, well, no offence meant,”
said Lancey, buttoning his shirt. “If
you don’t feel commoonicative I won’t
trouble you, no more than to thank ‘ee for the
shirt an’ trousers, which the latter bein’
dry is a blessin’, though they air a trifle
short in the legs an’ wide in the ’ips.”
After this Lancey was supplied with food.
While he was eating it he was startled
by sudden rushing and shouting, which was immediately
followed by the discharge of musketry on deck.
He sprang up, and seeing that the Turkish sailors
were grasping their arms and swarming up the hatchways,
he mingled with one of the streams. No one paid
any attention to him. At that moment he felt
a shock which he afterwards described as resembling
an earthquake or the blowing up of a powder-magazine.
Part of the planking near to where he stood was shattered.
Some of the guns appeared almost to leap for an instant
a few inches into the air. Gaining the deck
he ascertained that an attack of Russian torpedo-boats
was going on. It was, in fact, the attack which
I have already described, the monitor by which Lancey
was rescued being that which had been selected by
the Russian commander as his victim.
When the second torpedo exploded,
as already described, Lancey was standing near the
gangway, and saw that the men were lowering the boats
in urgent haste, for the vessel was evidently sinking.
“Yoos know ’bout dat,”
said a stern voice near him. At the same moment
he was seized by the interpreter and another man, who
made an effort to hurl him into the sea. But
Lancey was strong, and tenacious of life. Before
a third sailor, who was about to aid his comrades,
could act, the red bearded officer appeared with the
captain and was about to descend into the boat when
he observed Lancey struggling in the grasp of the
sailors.
“Spy!” he exclaimed in
the Turkish tongue, “you must not escape.
Get into the boat.”
The sailors fell back. Lancey,
not sure whether to regard this as temporary deliverance
or his death-warrant, hesitated, but at a sign from
the Pasha he was collared by five or six men and hurled
into the bottom of the boat, where he lay, half-stunned,
while they rowed towards the shore. Before reaching
it, however, he was still doomed to rough handling,
for one of the shots from the large guns, which were
fired almost at random from the flotilla, accidentally
struck the boat and sent it to the bottom.
Lancey was a good swimmer. The
cold water restored him to full vigour, and he struck
out boldly for the shore. He soon left the boat’s
crew behind, with the exception of one man who kept
close to his side all the way. As they neared
the shore, however, this man suddenly cried out like
one who is drowning. A second time he cried,
and the gurgling of his voice told its own tale.
The stout Englishman could not bear to leave a human
being to perish, whether friend or foe. He swam
towards the drowning man and supported him till their
feet touched bottom.
Then, perceiving that he was able
to stagger along unassisted, Lancey pushed hurriedly
from his side in the hope of escaping from any of the
crew who might reach land, for they were evidently
the reverse of friendly.
He landed among a mass of bulrushes.
Staggering through them, and nearly sinking at every
step, he gradually gained firmer footing.
“Ah, Jacob,” he muttered
to himself, pausing for a few minutes’ rest,
“little did you think you’d git into such
an ’orrible mess as this w’en you left
‘ome. Sarves you right for quittin’
your native land.”
With this comforting reflection he
pushed on again, and soon found himself on a road
which led towards a town, or village, whose lights
were distinctly visible.
What should he do? The village
was on the Bulgarian side, and the natives, if not
enemies, would of course become so on learning from
any of the saved men of the monitor who he was.
To swim across the Danube he felt was, after his
recent exertions, impossible. To remain where
he was would be to court death among the frogs.
Lancey was a prompt man. Right
or wrong, his conclusions were soon come to and acted
on. He decided to go straight to the village
and throw himself on the hospitality of the people.
In half an hour he found himself once more a prisoner!
Worse than that; the interpreter, who was among the
men saved from the wreck, chanced to discover him and
denounced him as a spy. The mood in which the
Turks then were was not favourable to him. He
was promptly locked up, and about daybreak next morning
was led out to execution.
Poor Lancey could scarcely credit
his senses. He had often read of such things,
but had never fully realised that they were true.
That he, an innocent man, should be hung off-hand,
without trial by jury or otherwise, in the middle
of the nineteenth century, was incredible! There
was something terribly real, however, in the galling
tightness of the rope that confined his arms, in the
troop of stern horsemen that rode on each side of
him, and in the cart with ropes, and the material
for a scaffold, which was driven in front towards the
square of the town. There was no sign of pity
in the people or of mercy in the guards.
The contrivance for effecting the
deadly operation was simple in the extreme, two
large triangles with a pole resting on them, and a
strong rope attached thereto. There was no “drop.”
An empty box sufficed, and this was to be kicked
away when the rope was round his neck.
Even up to the point of putting the
rope on, Lancey would not believe.
Reader, have you ever been led out
to be hanged? If not, be thankful! The
conditions of mind consequent on that state of things
is appalling. It is also various.
Men take it differently, according
to their particular natures; and as the nature of
man is remarkably complex, so the variation in his
feeling is exceedingly diverse.
There are some who, in such circumstances,
give way to abject terror. Others, whose nervous
system is not so finely strung and whose sense of
justice is strong, are filled with a rush of indignation,
and meet their fate with savage ferocity, or with
dogged and apparent indifference. Some, rising
above sublunary matters, shut their eyes to all around
and fix their thoughts on that world with which they
may be said to be more immediately connected, namely,
the next.
Lancey went through several of these
phases. When the truth first really came home
to him he quailed like an arrant coward. Then
a sense of violated justice supervened. If at
that moment Samson’s powers had been his, he
would have snapped the ropes that bound him like packthread,
and would have cut the throat of every man around him.
When he was placed upon the substitute for a “block,”
and felt by a motion of his elbows his utter powerlessness,
the dogged and indifferent state came on, but it did
not last. It could not. His Christian training
was adverse to it.
“Come,” he mentally exclaimed,
“it is God’s will. Quit you like
a man, Jacob and die!”
There is no doubt that in this frame
the brave fellow would have passed away if he had
not been roused by the loud clattering of horses’
feet as a cavalcade of glittering Turkish officers
dashed through the square. In front of these
he observed the red-bearded officer who had acted as
interpreter in the cabin of the Turkish monitor.
There came a sudden gush of hope!
Lancey knew not his name, but in a voice of thunder
he shouted
“’Elp! ’elp! ’allô!
Pasha! Redbeard! ”
The executioner hastened his work,
and stopped the outcry by tightening the rope.
But “Redbeard” had heard
the cry. He galloped towards the place of execution,
recognised the supposed spy, and ordered him to be
released, at the same time himself cutting the rope
with a sweep of his sword.
The choking sensation which Lancey
had begun to feel was instantly relieved. The
rope was removed from his neck, and he was gently led
from the spot by a soldier of the Pasha’s escort,
while the Pasha himself galloped coolly away with
his staff.
If Lancey was surprised at the sudden
and unexpected nature of his deliverance, he was still
more astonished at the treatment which he thereafter
experienced from the Turks. He was taken to one
of the best hotels in the town, shown into a handsome
suite of apartments, and otherwise treated with marked
respect, while the best of viands and the choicest
of wines were placed before him.
This made him very uncomfortable.
He felt sure that some mistake had occurred, and
would willingly have retired, if possible, to the hotel
kitchen or pantry; but the waiter, to whom he modestly
suggested something of the sort, did not understand
a word of English and could make nothing of Lancey’s
Turkish. He merely shook his head and smiled
respectfully, or volunteered some other article of
food. The worthy groom therefore made up his
mind to hold his tongue and enjoy himself as long
as it lasted.
“When I wakes up out o’
this remarkable and not unpleasant dream,” he
muttered, between the whiffs of his cigarette, one
evening after dinner, “I’ll write it out
fair, an’ ’ave it putt in the Daily
Noos or the Times.”
But the dream lasted so long that
Lancey began at last to fear he should never awake
from it. For a week he remained at that hotel,
faring sumptuously, and quite unrestrained as to his
movements, though he could not fail to observe that
he was closely watched and followed wherever he went.
“Is it a Plenipotentiary or
a furrin’ Prime Minister they take me for?”
he muttered to himself over a mild cigar of the finest
quality, “or mayhap they think I’m a Prince
in disguise! But then a man in disguise ain’t
known, and therefore can’t be follered, or, if
he was, what would be the use of his disguise?
No, I can’t make it out, no’ow.”
Still less, by any effort of his fancy
or otherwise, could he make out why, after a week’s
residence at the village in question, he was ordered
to prepare for a journey.
This order, like all others, was conveyed
to him by signs. Some parts of his treatment
had been managed otherwise. When, for instance,
on the night of his deliverance, it had been thought
desirable that his garments should be better and more
numerous, his attendants or keepers had removed his
old wardrobe and left in its place another, which,
although it comprehended trousers, savoured more of
the East than the West. Lancey submitted to
this, as to everything else, like a true philosopher.
Generally, however, the wishes of those around him
were conveyed by means of signs.
On the morning of his departure, a
small valise, stuffed with the few articles of comfort
which he required, and a change of apparel, was placed
at his bed-side. The hotel attendant, who had
apparently undertaken the management of him, packed
this up in the morning, having somewhat pointedly
placed within it his robe de nuit. Thereafter
the man bowed, smiled gravely, pointed to the door,
beckoned him to follow, and left the room.
By that time Lancey had, as it were,
given himself up. He acted with the unquestioning
obedience of a child or a lunatic. Following
his guide, he found a native cart outside with his
valise in it. Beside the cart stood a good horse,
saddled and bridled in the Turkish fashion. His
hotel-attendant pointed to the horse and motioned to
him to mount.
Then it burst upon Lancey that he
was about to quit the spot, perhaps for ever, and,
being a grateful fellow, he could not bear to part
without making some acknowledgment.
“My dear Turk, or whatever you
are,” he exclaimed, turning to his attendant,
“I’m sorry to say good-bye, an’ I’m
still more sorry to say that I’ve nothin’
to give you. A ten-pun-note, if I ’ad it,
would be but a small testimony of my feelin’s,
but I do assure you I ’av’n’t got
a rap.”
In corroboration of this he slapped
his empty pockets and shook his head. Then,
breaking into a benignant smile, he shook hands with
the waiter warmly, turned in silence, mounted his
horse and rode off after the native cart, which had
already started.
“You don’t know where
we’re goin’ to, I s’pose?”
said Lancey to the driver of the cart.
The man stared, but made no reply.
“Ah, I thought not!” said
Lancey; then he tried him in Turkish, but a shake
of the head intimated the man’s stupidity, or
his interrogator’s incapacity.
Journeying in silence over a flat
marshy country, they arrived about mid-day at a small
village, before the principal inn of which stood a
number of richly-caparisoned chargers. Here Lancey
found that he was expected to lunch and join the party,
though in what capacity he failed to discover.
The grave uncommunicative nature of the Turks had
perplexed and disappointed him so often that he had
at last resigned himself to his fate, and given up
asking questions, all the more readily, perhaps, that
his fate at the time chanced to be a pleasant one.
When the party had lunched, and were
preparing to take the road, it became obvious that
he was not regarded as a great man travelling incognito,
for no one took notice of him save a Turk who looked
more like a servant than an aristocrat. This
man merely touched him on the shoulder and pointed
to his horse with an air that savoured more of command
than courtesy.
Lancey took the hint and mounted.
He also kept modestly in rear. When the cavalcade
was ready a distinguished-looking officer issued from
the inn, mounted his charger, and at once rode away,
followed by the others. He was evidently a man
of rank.
For several days they journeyed, and
during this period Lancey made several attempts at
conversation with the only man who appeared to be
aware of his existence who, indeed, was
evidently his guardian. But, like the rest,
this man was taciturn, and all the information that
could be drawn out of him was that they were going
to Constantinople.
I hasten over the rest of the journey.
On reaching the sea, they went on board a small steamer
which appeared to have been awaiting them. In
course of time they came in sight of the domes and
minarets of Stamboul, the great city of the Sultans,
the very heart of Europe’s apple of discord.
It was evening, and the lights of
the city were everywhere glittering like long lines
of quivering gold down into the waters of the Bosporus.
Here the party with which Lancey had travelled left
him, without even saying good-bye, all
except his guardian, who, on landing, made signs that
he was to follow, or, rather, to walk beside him.
Reduced by this time to a thoroughly obedient slave,
and satisfied that no mischief was likely to be intended
by men who had treated him so well, Lancey walked
through the crowded streets and bazaars of Constantinople
as one in a dream, much more than half-convinced that
he had got somehow into an “Arabian Night,”
the “entertainments” of which seemed much
more real than those by which his imagination had
been charmed in days of old.
Coming into a part of the city that
appeared to be suburban, his keeper stopped before
a building that seemed a cross between a barrack and
a bird-cage. It was almost surrounded by a wall
so high that it hid the building from view, except
directly in front. There it could be seen, with
its small hermetically-closed windows, each covered
with a wooden trellis. It bore the aspect of
a somewhat forbidding prison.
“Konak palace,”
said the keeper, breaking silence for the first time.
“A konak; a palace! eh?”
repeated Lancey, in surprise; “more like a jail,
I should say. ’Owever, customs differ.
Oos palace may it be, now?”
“Pasha; Sanda Pasha,”
replied the man, touching a spring or bell in the
wall; “you goes in.”
As he spoke, a small door was opened
by an armed black slave, to whom he whispered a few
words, and then, stepping back, motioned to his companion
to enter.
“Arter you, sir,” said Lancey, with a
polite bow.
But as the man continued gravely to
point, and the black slave to hold the door open,
he forbore to press the matter, and stepped in.
The gate was shut with a bang, followed by a click
of bolts. He found, on looking round, that the
keeper had been shut out, and he was alone with the
armed negro.
“You’re in for it now,
Jacob my boy,” muttered Lancey to himself, as
he measured the negro with a sharp glance, and slowly
turned up the wristband of his shirt with a view to
prompt action. But the sable porter, far from
meditating an assault, smiled graciously as he led
the way to the principal door of the palace, or, as
the poor fellow felt sure it must be, the prison.