IN WHICH SOME DESPERATE ENTERPRISES ARE UNDERTAKEN
At this time the Russians had taken
up a strong position in the Balkan mountain range,
and entrenched themselves within a short distance of
the enemy.
After a night and a day of aimless
wandering, Jacob Lancey found himself at last in a
rocky defile between the hostile lines. How he
got there he could not tell, but there he was, in
a position of imminent danger, with the sentinels
of the belligerent armies on either side of him.
Evening was setting in when he made
this discovery, and recoiled, happily without having
been seen, into a narrow rocky place where the fast-failing
light had already deepened into gloom. A cold
white fog was slowly creeping up from the valleys
and covering the hill-sides.
It is in such places and circumstances
that men conceive and execute designs, which, according
to their nature, are deeds of recklessness or of heroism.
Two such ventures were afoot that night.
In the Russian camp preparations were
being made for a night attack on a village in possession
of the Turks, and out of which, with a view to future
movements, it was deemed necessary to drive them.
In this village there dwelt a youth, an intimate
friend of Dobri Petroff. The two had played
with each other in childhood, had roamed about the
country together in boyhood, and, when they reached
man’s estate, had become faster friends than
ever, being bound by the ties of intellectual as well
as physical sympathy. When this friend, Petko
Borronow, left Yenilik at the death of his mother,
it was to take charge of the little farm in the Balkan
mountains, the desolate home where his sister
Giuana, an invalid, and a beautiful girl, was now left
in solitude.
In his capacity of scout, Petroff
was always in the neighbourhood of headquarters, and
was frequently summoned to the tent of the general
commanding, to be interrogated. Thus he chanced
to overhear occasional remarks and hints which, when
pieced together by his intelligent mind, showed him
pretty clearly what was pending.
He sat by the camp-fire that night,
buried in meditation, with a series of troubled wrinkles
on a brow that was usually open and unclouded.
Many a time did he light his pipe and forget to smoke
it, and relight it, and again let it die out, until
his comrades were impressed by his absence of mind.
Well did the scout know by that time the certain fate
of a village which was to be fought for by contending
armies. To warn his friend Borronow in time
to remove his sister from the doomed village became
to the scout a duty which must be performed at all
hazards, but how to do this without deserting his
post, and appearing to go over to the enemy, was the
difficulty.
“Something troubles you,”
said his young friend Andre Vanovitch, who had for
some time sat smoking quietly at his side, gazing into
the fire, and thinking, no doubt, of the girl with
the auburn hair, far away in the land of the Muscove.
“Yes, I’m troubled about
friends,” was the scout’s laconic answer.
“Oh! they’re all right,
you may be sure, now that our fellows have crossed
the Danube in such force,” said Andre, supposing
that the other referred to his family.
“Perhaps!” returned Petroff, and relapsed
into silence.
Suddenly it occurred to him that he
had overheard some expression among the officers around
the General of a desire to know more particularly
about the disposition of the Turkish force, and the
suggestion that a spy should be sent out. His
brow cleared at once; with almost a triumphant look
on his countenance, he turned sharply to Andre, and
seized his arm.
“Well, Dobri,” said the
latter, with a smile and look of surprise, “I
have had perfect faith in the strength of your grip
without requiring positive proof.”
“Listen,” said the scout
earnestly. “I have a job to do, and a risk
to run.”
“That is obvious to every one
in the division,” returned Andre, with a touch
of the smile still curling his young moustache.
“Ay, but I mean a private job,
and a great risk the risk of being shot
as a traitor or a spy, and I want you, Andre, to clear
my character with the Russians if it fares ill with
me.”
Petroff’s unwonted energy of
action and earnestness of look and tone produced their
effect on the young dragoon. He listened intently
while his friend told him of his intended plan.
“But why go into the enemy’s
lines without permission?” objected Andre.
“Why risk being thought a deserter when you have
only to go and ask leave? It seems to me they
would be only too glad to accept your services as
a spy.”
“I’m not certain that
they would accept them,” replied the scout, with
a return of the perplexed look; “and if they
chanced to refuse leave, my case would be hopeless,
because I could not and would not dare to act in opposition
to positive orders; whereas, if I go off without leave,
I shall only be blamed for undertaking a foolish or
reckless act; that is, if I return in safety.
If I don’t return at all, it won’t matter
what is said or done, but I should count on you, Andre,
explaining that I did not desert.”
“But,” returned Andre,
“if you merely go to warn and save your friends,
I think the General won’t think much of your
spying.”
“You do me injustice, lad,”
said Petroff quietly. “I shall enter the
enemy’s lines as a real spy. I will visit
every point of his position, ascertain the number
of his troops, count his guns, and bring in such information
as will make the General wink, I hope, at my having
acted without orders. It would please me better
to go with permission, but I cannot allow the lives
of my friends to hang upon the chance humour of a
Russian general. You must remember, Andre, that
I am not a Russian soldier, and may therefore take
upon me to exercise a little more personal liberty
than you can. Why, you know,” continued
the scout, with a touch of humour in his glance, as
he rose and made some preliminary preparations, “I
might refuse to lead you Russians, or might lead you
to your destruction.”
“You would be shot if you did,”
returned the dragoon quietly.
“And what if I am willing to
be shot in a good cause? I should be no greater
hero than every man in your armies. But now,
Andre, one more shake of your hand. We may never
meet again, and I won’t part without saying
I’ve taken a fancy to you.”
“God knows I can truly say the
same to you,” cried Andre, leaping up with enthusiasm,
and seizing the scout’s hand with a grasp as
powerful as his own.
“And don’t be angry,”
added Petroff, in a gentle tone, as he tightened his
belt, “if I again urge you to keep the locket
always in remembrance. You’re not likely
ever to forget the auburn hair, but you may,
lad, you may, for there is no perfection in this world,
and soldiering is a dangerous life.”
Andre smiled half-contemptuously.
He felt that the advice was needless.
Petroff also smiled kindly, for he knew that it might
be needful.
Neither of these men was very deeply
impressed with the fact that keeping before the mental
eye the Maker of the “auburn hair,” and
of all other blessed human influences, was a better
and safer refuge. But what matter? Does
not our Creator in all His dealings make use of means?
Does He not lead us step by step from a lower to a
higher level? There are no ready-made human
angels in this life, male or female, with full-grown
wings to bear them over the troubles of earth to a
state of sudden sanctification. We are in a
rebel world, and, when lifted from the pit by a Saviour’s
hand, the steps by which the Spirit of God leads us
upwards are numerous as well as varied, including sometimes I
write without irreverence such footholds
as “auburn hair.”
Disguised as a Bulgarian rustic, Dobri
Petroff left the Russian camp, passed the outposts,
and, under cover of the fog, gained the neutral ground
between the two armies.
Of course the sentries on both sides
were numerous as well as vigilant especially
so on such a night. It therefore behoved him
to advance with extreme caution. Creeping from
mound to rock, and bush to knoll, he reached a small
clump of bushes, into which he entered for the purpose
of resting a few minutes and considering well his future
movements.
A thrill of excitement ran through
his frame when he discovered that he was not alone
in this thicket. A man sat there leaning against
a tree as if asleep. The scout crouched and
drew a revolver. A moment sufficed to show that
his arrival had not been observed. No wonder,
for his approach had been like that of a cat!
He was now in great perplexity. The man was
evidently not a sentinel of either belligerent that
was plain, but it was equally plain that he was armed.
To shoot him would be impossible without putting the
sentries of both sides on the alert. To pass
him in so small a thicket, without attracting attention,
would be difficult. To draw back would necessitate
a long detour, involving loss of precious time and
increase of risk. A thought occurred to him.
Many a time had he hunted among these mountains,
and well accustomed was he to glide with serpentine
caution towards his game. He would stalk him!
Petroff seldom thought twice in cases of emergency.
He unbuckled his sword quietly and hung it on a branch,
and leant his carbine against a tree, resolving to
trust to his great personal strength alone, for he
did not mean to sacrifice life if he could avoid it.
In case of being driven to extremity, his knife and
revolver would suffice.
Then, sinking down until he became
lost among the deep shadows of bush and brake, he
began the slow, laborious, and silent process of gliding
towards his unconscious victim.
This was one of those ventures to
which we have referred as being afoot on that foggy
night. The other venture had some points of similarity
to it, though the end in view was different.
Let us turn aside for a little to the Turkish camp.
There, round one of the watch-fires,
a considerable distance to the rear, stood a group
of Turkish soldiers chatting and smoking. Although
not so noisy as the Russians round their camp-fires,
these Turks were by no means taciturn. There
was a touch, now and then, of dry humour in the remarks
of some, and a sedate chuckle occasionally. Among
them stood Eskiwin and his resuscitated friend Ali
Bobo. The latter, although not naturally boastful,
had been so nettled by a big comrade underrating his
courage and muscular power, in regard to which latter
he, Bobo, was rather vain, that he vowed he would prove
both by going to the front and bringing in, single-handed,
a live Russian sentinel!
The big comrade laughed contemptuously,
whereupon Ali Bobo rose to carry out his threat, but
was warned by his mates of the danger of being shot
by his own commander for going on such an errand without
leave. Bobo replied that his captain would forgive
him when he presented his Russian prisoner.
As it was clear that the angry little man was in earnest,
his friend Eskiwin vowed he would go with him, and
the big comrade agreed to regard the deed as a sufficient
proof of Ali Bobo’s strength and prowess if
a Russian should be brought in by the two of them.
Bobo would have preferred to go alone, but Eskiwin
would take no denial.
Accordingly the two adventurous fellows
went off and were soon lost in the fog. In a
short time they reached the front, and began to move
with excessive caution in order to pass their own
sentries unobserved.
Ali Bobo, it must be remarked, had
not originated this idea of stalking sentinels.
Some Albanians in the army had already done so with
great success; but these ferocious murderers had done
it for the mere pleasure of killing their enemies,
without any other end in view. Their method
was to creep towards a wearied sentinel, which they
did with comparative ease, being expert mountaineers.
Each man on reaching his victim sprang on him from
behind, clapped a hand on his mouth, crushed his neck,
after the manner of garrotters, with his strong left
arm, and drawing a long keen knife thrust it into
his heart.
But our adventurers had no such murderous
design as this. To capture a live Russian was
their aim.
The front reached, and the Turkish
line of sentries safely passed in the fog, they came
unexpectedly on two Russian horsemen who were cautiously
riding towards the Turkish lines. These horsemen
were Sergeant Gotsuchakoff and Corporal Shoveloff.
They had been visiting the outposts, and, before
returning, were making a little private reconnaissance
of the enemy’s disposition, for Gotsuchakoff
and Shoveloff were enthusiasts in their way, and fond
of adventure.
The ground at the spot being much
broken, and affording facility for concealment, especially
to men on foot, Eskiwin and Ali Bobo crept unseen
upon a low cliff, and lay down behind a mass of rocks.
The Russians chanced to select the
same spot as a point of observation, but, instead
of riding to the top of the eminence, where they would
have been rather conspicuous, they rode under the
cliff and halted just below, not far distant
from the spot where the Turks lay, so that Eskiwin,
craning his long neck over the rocks, could look down
on the helmets of the Russian cavaliers.
For some minutes the sergeant and
corporal conversed in whispers. This was exceedingly
tantalising to the friends above! The hiss of
their voices could be distinctly heard. Eskiwin’s
long arm could almost have reached them with a lance.
Presently the corporal rode slowly away, became dim
in the fog, and finally disappeared, while the sergeant
remained immoveable like an equestrian statue.
“This,” whispered Ali
Bobo solemnly, “is more than I can stand.”
Eskiwin whispered in reply that he
would have to stand it whether he could or not.
Bobo didn’t agree with him (not
an unusual condition of mind with friends).
He looked round. A huge stone lay at his elbow.
It seemed to have been placed there on purpose.
He rose very slowly, lifted the stone, held it in
a position which is familiar to Scotch Highlanders,
and hurled it with tremendous force down on the head
of Sergeant Gotsuchakoff.
The sergeant bowed to circumstances.
Without even a cry, he tumbled off his horse and
laid his helmet in the dust.
The Turks leaped down, seized him
in their powerful arms, and carried him away, while
the frightened horse bolted. It followed, probably,
an animal instinct, and made for the Russian lines.
The corporal chanced to return at
that moment. The Turks dropped their burden
and lay flat down beside it. Seeing that his
friend was gone, and hearing the clatter of his retreating
charger, Corporal Shoveloff put spurs to his steed
and followed.
The Turks then rose, tied the legs
of the sergeant with his own sword-belt, lest he should
recover inopportunely, and bore him to a neighbouring
thicket which loomed darkly through the fog.
“Fate smiles upon us,”
whispered Ali Bobo, as the comrades entered the bushes
and laid their burden down.
If Bobo had known that he had laid
that burden down within ten yards of the spot where
Dobri Petroff was preparing, as I have described, to
stalk the figure he had discovered in the same thicket,
he might have recalled the sentiment in reference
to Fate. But Bobo did not know.
Suddenly, however, he discovered the
figure that Petroff was stalking. It was leaning
against a tree. He pointed it out to Eskiwin,
while the scout, interrupted in his plans, sank into
darkness and watched the result with much curiosity
and some impatience.
Just then the figure roused itself
with a heavy sigh, looked sleepily round, and, remarking
in an undertone, “It’s an ’orrible
sitooation,” turned itself into a more comfortable
position and dropped off again with another sigh.
But Ali Bobo did not allow it to enjoy
repose. He glided forward, and, with a spring
like that of a cat, laid his hand upon its mouth and
threw it violently to the ground. With the aid
of Eskiwin he pinned it, and then proceeded to gag
it.
All this Dobri Petroff observed with
much interest, not unmingled with concern, for he
perceived that the new-comers were Turks, and did not
like the idea of seeing a man murdered before his eyes.
But the thought of his friend Petko Borronow, and
what he had at stake, restrained him from action.
He was however at once relieved by observing that,
while the short Turk kneeled on the prisoner’s
chest and kept his mouth covered, so as to prevent
his crying out, the tall Turk quickly tied his legs
and hands. It was thus clear that immediate death
was not intended.
The scout’s interest, to say
nothing of surprise, was increased by what followed.
When the short Turk, pointing a revolver at the prisoner’s
head, removed his hand so as to admit of speech, that
prisoner’s first utterance was an exclamation
of astonishment in tones which were familiar to Petroff’s
ear. This was followed by exclamations of recognition
from the Turks, and the short man seizing one of victim’s
tied hands shook it warmly.
At that moment the scout’s eyes
were opened still wider with amazement, for the unfortunate
Sergeant Gotsuchakoff who, as I have said,
had been laid down a few yards from him, and whom
he had almost forgotten began to recover
consciousness and growled something in an undertone
about its being “far too soon to turn out.”
Petroff recognised the well-known
growl of the sergeant. In an instant he glided
to his side, laid his hand on his mouth, and whispered
“Gotsuchakoff, be still for
your life! I am Dobri Petroff. Do you
understand?”
He looked close to the sergeant’s
eyes, and saw that he was understood. At once
he removed his hand, and untied the belt which fastened
the sergeant’s feet.
Gotsuchakoff was too well used to
war’s alarms to give way to unreasonable curiosity.
He instantly perceived that the scout required of
him the utmost circumspection for some reason or other,
and, in the spirit of a true soldier, awaited orders
in total silence, ready for prompt action.
This was well, because there was little
time to spare. When Petroff directed the sergeant’s
attention to the Turks they were busy undoing the
bonds of their prisoner.
Without saying another word, the scout
glided swiftly forward. He was promptly followed
by the sergeant. Next moment both men leaped
on the Turks and had them by their throats.
Eskiwin was no match for Gotsuchakoff,
who bore him back and held him like a vice.
As for Ali Bobo, strong though he was, he felt himself
to be a perfect baby in the grasp of the scout.
The two men submitted at once, and while Petroff
ordered them in a low tone to keep silence, enforcing
the order with the touch of a revolver’s muzzle,
the sergeant quickly bound their arms behind them.
The scout turned to the prisoner,
who was sitting on the ground with eyes dilated to
the uttermost, and mouth wide open. He sat perfectly
speechless.
There was just light enough to make
darkness visible. Petroff looked close in to
the face of the man whom he had been about to stalk.
“Lancey!” he exclaimed.
“Dobri Peterhuff,” gasped the other.
“Why, where did you come
from?” asked the scout in Turkish, which he
was aware Lancey had been attempting to learn.
“Dobri, my friend,” replied
the other solemnly, in English, “if this is
a dream, it is the most houtrageous dream that I’ve
’ad since I was a babby. But I’m
used to ’em now only I do wish it
was morning.”
The scout smiled, not because of what
was said, which of course he did not understand, but
because of the Englishman’s expression.
But time pressed; too much had already been lost.
He therefore contented himself by giving Lancey a
friendly slap on the shoulder and turned to the sergeant.
“Gotsuchakoff,” said he,
“I’m out on special service, and have already
been delayed too long. This man,” pointing
to Lancey, “is an Englishman and a friend remember
that. The others are Turks. You know what
to do with them. I cannot help you, but you
won’t need help.”
“Just so,” replied Gotsuchakoff,
with an intelligent nod, “only lend a hand to
tie them together and then be off about your business.”
“Lancey,” said Ali Bobo,
while the operation was being performed, “zat
big Bulgar beast he say you’s his friend.”
“Big he is, a beast he’s
not, and a friend he was,” replied Lancey, with
a dazed look.
Further conversation was cut short
by the sergeant ordering the trio to move on.
He led them towards the Russian lines by a cord passed
round Bobo’s neck, and carried a revolver in
his right hand. Dobri Petroff immediately disappeared
in the opposite direction.
At a later hour that night he entered
the cottage of young Borronow. Giuana, Petko’s
sister, reclined on a rude but comfortable couch.
She was singularly pretty and innocent-looking, but
very delicate and young. Her friends called her
Formosa Giuana or Pretty Jane. Petko had been
seated beside her, talking about the war, when his
friend entered with a quick stealthy motion and laid
a hand on his shoulder.
“Dobri!” exclaimed the youth.
“Petko, there is danger at hand.
Mischief is in the air. Time is precious.
I may not say what it is, but you know me I
am not easily alarmed. You must promise me to
quit this village with your sister within one hour.”
“But, Dobri, why? what? ”
“Petko, no questions.
More than that, no remarks,” interrupted the
scout earnestly and firmly. “Another time
I will explain. At present I ask you to trust,
believe, and obey your friend. If you would save
your life and that of Giuana leave this village within
an hour. Go where you will, but leave it.”
“I will both trust and obey
you, Dobri,” said Petko, returning the squeeze
of his friend’s hand, which he had not yet let
go.
“I said that time pressed, Petko;
God be with you! Farewell.”
The scout turned, stooped to kiss
Giuana on her pale cheek, and before either could
utter another word was gone.
By midnight Dobri Petroff had made
his rounds now as a carter gruffly and
clumsily driving a cart and horse of which he had managed
to possess himself; anon as a stupid countryman belonging
to the village on the height, noisily wanting to know
why the Turks had robbed him of the said cart and
horse, which he had conveniently tipped over a precipice,
and vowing that he would carry his complaint against
the army to the Sultan himself; once he was fain to
act the part of a drunk man, almost incapable of taking
care of himself.
During his perambulations he ran frequent
risk of being shot by irascible Bashi-Bazouks or wearied
Albanians; was more than once looked on with suspicion,
and frequently suffered rough treatment, but he acted
his part well. Nothing could draw from him a
word or look beyond average intelligence.
No indignity could rouse him to more
than the warfare of abuse, and the result was that
long before dawn he found himself once more close to
the front.
But fortune seemed inclined to fail
him here. He was creeping cautiously among a
heap of rocks when a sentinel of the advanced line
of the Turks discovered and challenged him.
Petroff knew well that escape by running would be
impossible, for he was only six yards distant.
He made therefore no reply, but sank on the ground,
keeping his eye, however, sharply on the advancing
sentinel. His only cause of anxiety was that
the Turk might fire at him, in which case his doom
would have been sealed. The Turk, however, preferred
to advance and thrust his bayonet into him.
Petroff had calculated on and was
prepared for this. He caught the bayonet and
checked its progress between his ribs. Another
moment and the Turk lay on his back with the stock
of his own rifle broken over his skull. The
scuffle had attracted the next sentry, who ran to his
comrade’s assistance. The scout instantly
made the best use of his legs. He was as fleet
as a mountain deer, but the rifle-ball was fleeter.
He felt a sharp pain in his left arm, and almost fell.
The alarm was given. Sentries on both sides
fired, and another bullet grazed his temple, causing
blood to flow freely down his face. Still he
ran steadily on, and in a few minutes was safe within
the Russian lines.
He was seized, of course, by those
who first met him, and, not being known to them, was
at once carried before a captain of dragoons, who
knew him.
By the captain he was sent to the
tent of the General the younger Skobeleff, to
whom he related the important information which he
had obtained at so great risk.
“Thank you, my fine fellow,”
said the General, when Petroff had finished; “you
have done good service are you badly wounded?”
“No nothing worth
mentioning,” replied the scout, but as he spoke
a feeling of giddiness oppressed him. He fainted
and fell as he left the General’s tent, and
was carried on a stretcher to the rear.
Before the grey dawn had dissipated
the mists of morning, the village on the height was
fought for, lost, and won; its dwellings were reduced
to ashes, and those of its inhabitants who had escaped
massacre were scattered like sheep among the gorges
of their native hills; but Petko and Giuana Borronow
were safe at least for the time with
a kinsman, among the higher heights of the Balkan
range.