Instantly I recognized in him the insolent priest who had confronted

me on my way to La Trappe that morning. I knew him, although now he

was wearing neither robe nor shovel-hat, nor those square shoes too

large to buckle closely over his flat insteps.

And he knew me.

He appeared admirably cool and composed, glancing at the Countess for

an instant with an interrogative expression; then he acknowledged my

presence by bowing almost humorously.

"This is Monsieur Scarlett, of the Imperial Military Police," said

the Countess, in a clear voice, ending with that slightly rising

inflection which demands an answer.

"Mr. Buckhurst," I said, "I am an Inspector of Military Police, and

I cannot begin to tell you what a pleasure this meeting is to me."

"I have no doubt of that, monsieur," said Buckhurst, in his smooth,

almost caressing tones. "It, however, inconveniences me a great deal

to cross the frontier to-day, even in your company, otherwise I should

have surrendered with my confrères."

"But there is no question of your crossing the frontier, Mr.

Buckhurst," I said.

His colorless eyes sought mine, then dropped. They were almost stone

white in the lamp-light--white as his delicately chiselled face and

hands.

"Are we not to be exiled?" he asked.

"You are not," I said.

"Am I not under arrest?"

I stepped forward and placed him formally under arrest, touching him

slightly on the shoulder. He did not move a muscle, yet, beneath the

thin cloth of his coat I could divine a frame of iron.

"Your creed is one of non-resistance to violence," I said--"is it

not?"

"Yes," he replied. I saw that gray ring around the pale pupil of his

eyes contracting, little by little.

"You have not asked me why I arrest you," I suggested, "and,

monsieur, I must ask you to step back from that table--quick!--don't

move!--not one finger!"

For a second he looked into the barrel of my pistol with concentrated

composure, then glanced at the table-drawer which he had jerked open.

A revolver lay shining among the litter of glass tubes and papers in

the drawer.

The Countess, too, saw the revolver and turned an astonished face to

my prisoner.

"Who brought you here?" asked Buckhurst, quietly of me.

"I did," said the Countess, her voice almost breaking. "Tell this

man and his government that you are ready to face every charge against

your honor! There is a dreadful mistake; they--they think you are--"

"A thief," I interposed, with a smile. "The government only asks you

to prove that you are not."

Slowly Buckhurst turned his eyes on the Countess; the faintest glimmer

of white teeth showed for an instant between the gray lines that were

his lips.

"So you brought this man here?" he said. "Oh, I am glad to know

it."

"Then you cannot be that same John Buckhurst who stands in the

tribune of the Château Rouge and promises all Paris to his chosen

people," I remarked, smiling.

"No," he said, slowly, "I cannot be that man, nor can I--"

"Stop! Stand back from that table!" I cried.

"I beg your pardon," he said, coolly.

"Madame," said I, without taking my eyes from him, "in a community

dedicated to peace, a revolver is an anachronism. So I think--if you

move I will shoot you, Mr. Buckhurst!--so I think I had better take

it, table-drawer and all--"

"Stop!" said Buckhurst.

"Oh no, I can't stop now," said I, cheerfully, "and if you attempt

to upset that lamp you will make a sad mistake. Now walk to the door!

Turn your back! Go slowly!--halt!"

With the table-drawer under one arm and my pistol-hand swinging, I

followed Buckhurst out into the hall.

Daylight dazzled me; it must have affected Buckhurst, too, for he

reached out to the stone balustrade and guided himself down the steps,

five paces in front of me.

Under the trees on the lawn, beside the driveway, I saw Dr. Delmont

standing, big, bushy head bent thoughtfully, hands clasped behind his

back.

Near him, Tavernier and Bazard were lifting a few boxes into a

farm-wagon. The carriage from Trois-Feuilles was also there, a stumpy

Alsatian peasant on the box. But there were yet no signs of the escort

of gendarmes which had been promised me.

As Buckhurst appeared, walking all alone ahead of me, Dr. Delmont

looked up with a bitter laugh. "So they found you, too? Well,

Buckhurst, this is too bad. They might have given you one more day on

your experiments."

"What experiments?" I asked, glancing at the bottles and retorts in

the table-drawer.

"Nitrogen for exhausted soil," said the Countess, quietly.

I set the table-drawer on the grass, rested my pistol on my hip, and

looked around at my prisoners, who now were looking intently at me.

"Gentlemen," said I, "let me warn you not to claim comradeship with

Mr. Buckhurst. And I will show you one reason why."

I picked up from the table-drawer a little stick about five inches

long and held it up.

"What is that, doctor? You don't know? Oh, you think it might be some

sample of fertilizer containing concentrated nitrogen? You are

mistaken, it is not nitrogen, but nitro-glycerine."

Buckhurst's face changed slightly.

"Is it not, Mr. Buckhurst?" I asked.

He was silent.

"Would you permit me to throw this bit of stuff at your feet?" And I

made a gesture.

The superb nerve of the man was something to remember. He did not

move, but over his face there crept a dreadful pallor, which even the

others noticed, and they shrank away from him, shocked and amazed.

"Here, gentlemen," I continued, "is a box with a German

label--'Oberlohe, Hanover.' The silicious earth with which

nitro-glycerine is mixed to make dynamite comes from Oberlohe, in

Hanover."

I laid my pistol on the table, struck a match, and deliberately

lighted my stick of dynamite. It burned quietly with a brilliant

flame, and I laid it on the grass and let it burn out like a lump of

Greek fire.

"Messieurs," I said, cocking and uncocking my pistol, "it is not

because this man is a dangerous, political criminal and a maker of

explosives that the government has sent me here to arrest him ... or

kill him. It is because he is a common thief,... a thief who steals

crucifixes,... like this one--"

I brushed aside a pile of papers in the drawer and drew out a big gold

crucifix, marvellously chiselled from a lump of the solid metal....

"A thief," I continued, "who strips the diamonds from crucifixes,...

as this has been stripped,... and who sells a single stone to a Jew in

Strasbourg, named Fishel Cohen,... now in prison to confront our

friend Buckhurst."

In the dead silence I heard Dr. Delmont's heavy breathing. Tavernier

gave a dry sob and covered his face with his thin hands. The young

Countess stood motionless, frightfully white, staring at Buckhurst,

who had folded his arms.

Sylvia Elven touched her, but the Countess shook her off and walked

straight to Buckhurst.

"Look at me," she said. "I have promised you my friendship, my faith

and trust and support. And now I say to you, I believe in you. Tell

them where that crucifix came from."

Buckhurst looked at me, long enough to see that the end of his rope

had come. Then he slowly turned his deadly eyes on the girl before

him.

Scarlet to the roots of her hair, she stood there, utterly stunned.

The white edges of Buckhurst's teeth began to show again; for an

instant I thought he meant to strike her. Then the sudden double beat

of horses' hoofs broke out along the avenue below, and, through the

red sunset I saw a dozen horsemen come scampering up the drive toward

us.

"They've sent me lancers instead of gendarmes for your escort," I

remarked to Dr. Delmont; at the same moment I stepped out into the

driveway to signal the riders, raising my hand.

Instantly a pistol flashed--then another and another, and a dozen

harsh voices shouted: "Hourra! Hourra! Preussen!"

"Mille tonnerre!" roared Delmont; "the Prussians are here!"

"Look out! Stand back there! Get the women back!" I cried, as an

Uhlan wheeled his horse straight through a bed of geraniums and fired

his horse-pistol at me.

Delmont dragged the young Countess to the shelter of an elm; Sylvia

Elven and Tavernier followed; Buckhurst ran to the carriage and leaped

in.

"No resistance!" bellowed Delmont, as Bazard snatched up the pistol I

had taken from Buckhurst. But the invalid had already fired at a

horseman, and had gone down under the merciless hoofs with a lance

through his face.

My first impulse was to shoot Buckhurst, and I started for him.

Then, in front of me, a horse galloped into the table and fell with a

crash, hurling his rider at my feet. I can see him yet sprawling there

on the lawn, a lank, red-faced fellow, his helmet smashed in, and his

spurred boots sticking fast in the sod.

Helter-skelter through the trees came the rest of the Uhlans, shouting

their hoarse "Hourra! Hourra! Preussen!"--white-and-black pennons

streaming from their lance-heads, pistols flashing in the early dusk.

I ran past Bazard's trampled body and fired at an Uhlan who had seized

the horses which were attached to the carriage where Buckhurst sat.

The Uhlan's horse reared and plunged, carrying him away at a frightful

pace, and I do not know whether I hit him or not, but he dropped his

pistol, and I picked it up and fired at another cavalryman who shouted

and put his horse straight at me.

Again I ran around the wagon, through a clump of syringa bushes, and

up the stone steps to the terrace, and after me galloped one of those

incomparable cossack riders--an Uhlan, lance in rest, setting his wiry

little horse to the stone steps with a loud "Hourra!"

It was too steep a grade for the gallant horse. I flung my pistol in

the animal's face and the poor brute reared straight up and fell

backward, rolling over and over with his unfortunate rider, and

falling with a tremendous splash into the pool below.

"In God's name stop that!" roared Delmont, from below. "Give up,

Scarlett! They mean us no harm!"

I could see the good doctor on the lawn, waving his handkerchief

frantically at me; in a group behind stood the Countess and Sylvia;

Tavernier was kneeling beside Bazard's body; two Uhlans were raising

their stunned comrade from the wreck of the table; other Uhlans

cantered toward the foot of the terrace above which I stood.

"Come down, hussar!" called an officer. "We respect your uniform."

"Will you parley?" I asked, listening intently for the gallop of my

promised gendarmes. If I could only gain time and save Buckhurst. He

was there in the carriage; I had seen him spring into it when the

Germans burst in among the trees.

"Foulez-fous fous rendre? Oui ou non?" shouted the officer, in his

terrible French.

"Eh bien,... non!" I cried, and ran for the château.

I heard the Uhlans dismount and run clattering and jingling up the

stone steps. As I gained the doorway they shot at me, but I only fled

the faster, springing up the stairway. Here I stood, sabre in hand,

ready to stop the first man.

Up the stairs rushed three Uhlans, sabres shining in the dim light

from the window behind me; I laid my forefinger flat on the blade of

my sabre and shortened my arm for a thrust--then there came a blinding

flash, a roar, and I was down, trying to rise, until a clinched fist

struck me in the face and I fell flat on my back.

Without any emotion whatever I saw an Uhlan raise his sabre to finish

me; also I saw a yellow-and-black sleeve interposed between death and

myself.

"No butchery!" growled the big officer who had summoned me from the

lawn. "Cursed pig, you'd sabre your own grandmother! Lift him, Sepp!

You, there, Loisel!--lift him up. Is he gone?"

"He is alive, Herr Rittmeister," said a soldier, "but his back is

broken."

"It isn't," I said.

"Herr Je!" muttered the Rittmeister; "an eel, and a Frenchman, and

nine long lives! Here, you hussar, what's the matter with you?"

"One of them shot me; I thought it was to be sabres," said I,

weakly.

"And why the devil wasn't it sabres!" roared the officer, turning on

his men. "One to three--and six more below! Sepp, you disgust me.

Carry him out!"

I groaned as they lifted me. "Easy there!" growled the officer,

"don't pull him that way. Now, young hell-cat, set your teeth; you

have eight more lives yet."

They got me out to the terrace, and carried me to the lawn. One of the

men brought a cup of water from the pool.

"Herr Rittmeister," I said, faintly, "I had a prisoner here; he

should be in the carriage. Is he?"

The officer walked briskly over to the carriage. "Nobody here but two

women and a scared peasant!" he called out.

As I lay still staring up into the sky, I heard the Rittmeister

addressing Dr. Delmont in angry tones. "By every law of civilized war

I ought to hang you and your friend there! Civilians who fire on

troops are treated that way. But I won't. Your foolish companion lies

yonder with a lance through his mouth. He's dead; I say nothing. For

you, I have no respect. But I have for that hell-cat who did his duty.

You civilians--you go to the devil!"

"Are not your prisoners sacred from insult?" asked the doctor,

angrily.

"Prisoners! My prisoners! You compliment yourself! Loisel! Send

those impudent civilians into the house! I won't look at them! They

make me sick!"

The astonished doctor attempted to take his stand by me, offering his

services, but the troopers hustled him and poor Tavernier off up the

terrace steps.

"The two ladies in the carriage, Herr Rittmeister?" said a

cavalryman, coming up at salute.

"What? Ladies? Oh yes." Then he muttered in his mustache: "Always

around--always everywhere. They can't stay there. I want that

carriage. Sepp!"

"At orders, Herr Rittmeister!"

"Carry that gentleman to the carriage. Place Schwartz and Ruppert in

the wagon yonder. Get straw--you, Brauer, bring straw--and toss in

those boxes, if there is room. Where's Hofman?"

"In the pool, Herr Rittmeister."

"Take him out," said the officer, soberly. "Uhlans don't abandon

their dead."

Two soldiers lifted me again and bore me away in the darkness. I was

perfectly conscious.

And all the while I was listening for the gallop of my gendarmes, not

that I cared very much, now that Buckhurst was gone.

"Herr Rittmeister," I said, as they laid me in the carriage, "ask

the Countess de Vassart if she will let me say good-bye to her."

"With pleasure," said the officer, promptly. "Madame, here is a

polite young gentleman who desires to make his adieux. Permit me,

madame--he is here in the dark. Sepp! fall back! Loisel, advance ten

paces! Halt!"

"Is it you, Monsieur Scarlett?" came an unsteady voice, from the

darkness.

"Yes, madame. Can you forgive me?"

"Forgive you? My poor friend, I have nothing to forgive. Are you

badly hurt, Monsieur Scarlett?"

"I don't know," I muttered.

Suddenly the chapel bell of La Trappe rang out a startling peal; the

Prussian captain shouted: "Stop that bell! Shoot every civilian in

the house!" But the Uhlans, who rushed up the terrace, found the great

doors bolted and the lower windows screened with steel shutters.

On the battlements of the south wing a red radiance grew brighter;

somebody had thrown wood into the iron basket of the ancient beacon,

and set fire to it.

"That teaches me a lesson!" bawled the enraged Rittmeister, shaking

his fist up at the brightening alarm signal.

He vaulted into his saddle, wheeled his horse and rode up to the

peasant, Brauer, who, frightened to the verge of stupidity, sat on the

carriage-box.

"Do you know the wood-road that leads to Gunstett through the

foot-hills?" he demanded, controlling his fury with a strong effort.

The blank face of the peasant was answer enough; the Rittmeister

glared around; his eyes fell on the Countess.

"You know this country, madame?"

"Yes, monsieur."

"Will you set us on our way through the Gunstett hill-road?"

"No."

The chapel bell was clanging wildly; the beacon shot up in a whirling

column of sparks and red smoke.

"Put that woman into the carriage!" bellowed the officer. "I'm

cursed if I leave her to set the whole country yapping at our heels!

Loisel, put her in beside the prisoner! Madame, it is useless to

resist. Hark! What's that sound of galloping?"

I listened. I heard nothing save the clamor of the chapel bell.

An Uhlan laid a heavy hand on the shoulder of the listening Countess;

she tried to draw back, but he pushed her brutally into the carriage,

and she stumbled and fell into the cushions beside me.

"Uhlans, into your saddles!" cried the Rittmeister, sharply. "Two

men to the wagon!--a man on the box there! Here you, Jacques Bonhomme,

drive carefully or I'll hang you higher than the Strasbourg clock. Are

the wounded in the straw? Sepp, take the riderless horses. Peloton,

attention! Draw sabres! March! Trot!"

Fever had already begun to turn my head; the jolting of the carriage

brought me to my senses at times; at times, too, I could hear the two

wounded Uhlans groaning in the wagon behind me, the tramping of the

cavalry ahead, the dull rattle of lance butts in the leather

stirrup-boots.

If I could only have fainted, but I could not, and the agony grew so

intense that I bit my lip through to choke the scream that strained my

throat.

Once the carriage stopped; in the darkness I heard somebody whisper:

"There go the French riders!" And I fancied I heard a far echo of

hoof-strokes along the road to La Trappe. It might have been the

fancy of an intermittent delirium; it may have been my delayed

gendarmes--I never knew. And the carriage presently moved on more

smoothly, as though we were now on one of those even military

high-roads which traverse France from Luxembourg to the sea.

Which way we were going I did not know, I did not care. Absurdly

mingled with sick fancies came flashes of reason, when I could see the

sky frosted with silver, and little, bluish stars peeping down. At

times I recognized the mounted men around me as Prussian Uhlans, and

weakly wondered by what deviltry they had got into France, and what

malignant spell they cast over the land that the very stones did not

rise up and smite them from their yellow-and-black saddles.

Once--it was, I think, very near daybreak--I came out of a dream in

which I was swimming through oceans of water, drinking as I swam. The

carriage had stopped; I could not see the lancers, but presently I

heard them all talking in loud, angry voices. There appeared to be

some houses near by; I heard a dog barking, a great outcry of pigs and

feathered fowls, the noise of a scuffle, a trampling of heavy boots, a

shot!

Then the terrible voice of the Rittmeister: "Hang that man to his

barn gate! Pig of an assassin, I'll teach you to murder German

soldiers!"

A woman began to scream without ceasing.

"Burn that house!" bellowed the Rittmeister.

Through the prolonged screaming I heard the crash of window-glass;

presently a dull red light grew out of the gloom, brighter and

brighter. The screaming never ceased.

"Uhlans! Mount!" came the steady voice of the Rittmeister; the

carriage started. Almost at the word the darkness turned to flame;

against the raging furnace of a house on fire I saw the figure of a

man, inky black, hanging from the high cross-bar of the cow-yard gate,

and past him filed the shadowy horsemen, lances slanting backward from

their stirrups.

The last I remember was seeing the dead man's naked feet--for they

hanged him in his night-shirt--and the last I heard was that awful

screaming from the red shadows that flickered across the fields of

uncut wheat.

For presently my madness began again, and again I was bathed to the

mouth in cold, sweet waters, and I drank as I swam lazily in the

sunshine.

My next lucid interval came from pain almost unendurable. We were

fording a river in bright starlight; the carriage bumped across the

stones, water washed and slopped over the carriage floor. To right and

left, Prussian lancers were riding, and I saw the water boiling under

their horses and their long lances aslant the stars.

But there were more horsemen now, scores and scores of them, trampling

through the shallow river. And beyond I could see a line of cannon,

wallowing through the water, shadowy artillerymen clinging to forge

and caisson, mounted men astride straining teams, tall officers on

either flank, sitting their horses motionless in mid-stream.

The carriage stopped.

"Are you suffering?" came a low voice, close to my ear.

"Madame, could I have a little of that water?" I muttered.

Very gently she laid me back. I was entirely without power to move

below my waist, or to support my body.

She filled my cap with river water and held it while I drank. After I

had my fill she bathed my face, passing her wet hands through my hair

and over my eyes. The carriage moved on.

After a while she whispered.

"Are you awake?"

"Yes, madame."

"See the dawn--how red it is on the hills! There are vineyards there

on the heights,... and a castle,... and soldiers moving out across the

river meadows."

The rising sun was shining in my eyes as we came to a halt before

a small stone bridge over which a column of cavalry was

passing--Prussian hussars, by their crimson dolmans and little, flat

busbies.

Our Uhlan escort grouped themselves about us to watch the hussars

defile at a trot, and I saw the Rittmeister rigidly saluting their

standards as they bobbed past above a thicket of sabres.

"What are these Uhlans doing?" broke in a nasal voice behind us; an

officer, followed by two orderlies and a trumpeter, came galloping up

through the mud.

"Who's that--a dead Frenchman?" demanded the officer, leaning over

the edge of the carriage to give me a near-sighted stare. Then he saw

the Countess, stared at her, and touched the golden peak of his

helmet.

"At your service, madame," he said. "Is this officer dead?"

"Dying, general," said the Rittmeister, at salute.

"Then he will not require these men. Herr Rittmeister, I take your

Uhlans for my escort. Madame, you have my sympathy; can I be of

service?"

He spoke perfect French. The Countess looked up at him in a bewildered

way. "You cannot mean to abandon this dying man here?" she asked.

There was a silence, broken brusquely by the Rittmeister. "That

Frenchman did his duty!"

"Did he?" said the general, staring at the Countess.

"Very well; I want that carriage, but I won't take it. Give the

driver a white flag, and have him drive into the French lines. Herr

Rittmeister, give your orders! Madame, your most devoted!" And he

wheeled his beautiful horse and trotted off down the road, while the

Rittmeister hastily tied a handkerchief to a stick and tossed it up to

the speechless peasant on the box.

"Morsbronn is the nearest French post!" he said, in French. Then he

bent from his horse and looked down at me.

"You did your duty!" he snapped, and, barely saluting the Countess,

touched spurs to his mount and disappeared, followed at a gallop by

his mud-splashed Uhlans.




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