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"You won't. Very well, sir, I'll pay you out for this! What's your name?"
"Kovatsh Miksha, a n.o.bleman of St. Vilmosh. I will not go, even to please your G.o.d!"
"Oh, I beg your pardon! I did not know you! But who's this fellow?"
"That's my cousin, Andrash. He's a n.o.bleman, and he won't go!"
"Why, where the deuce are the peasants?"
"Shot, or run away!"
"The rascals!" cried the judge; "the cowards! Never mind, I'll make them pay for it!"
"I beg your worship's pardon," interposed the inspector; "but my opinion is that we had better go home. We have done our duty, and there are only fifteen men here. The rest are either dead or run away. We have no chance of success. When Viola finds out how few there are of us, and that we cannot watch the hut on all sides, he will make his way out into the forest."
The justice was on the point of yielding, when Mr. Catspaw approached the group. He suggested another scheme. "Put fire to the hut," said he.
"They will find it too hot to hold them; they will come out; and when they do, you shoot them down." His advice was eagerly adopted. The inspector was frantic with joy, and a Pandur was at once sent off to carry the scheme into effect. The men of St. Vilmosh and the Pandurs took their places in the thicket, ready to fire at the robbers; and Mr.
Skinner was so violent in expressing the pleasure he felt, that he swore twice as much as before.
The situation of the robbers was far worse than their a.s.sailants suspected. The shot, which the inspector had fired through the cutting, had pierced the broad chest of Ratz Andor. He lay on his back, groaning, and moving his limbs in a pool of blood. The butcher walked to and fro with alternate oaths and prayers, and cursing the day of his birth.
Viola was quiet and silent. He felt convinced that his hour had come, and he awaited death fearlessly. The thought of his family alone was a weight upon his heart. For a moment he thought of flight. There was a possibility of escape by breaking through the roof, and escaping from the back of the hut. But he looked at his old companion, who lay bleeding at his feet, and who had once saved his life. His resolution was taken. He could not leave that man in the hour of his agony.
Immediately afterwards he heard them prepare for another attack, and he awaited his fate with firmness and resignation.
"Fire at them!" said Ratz Andor, when he heard the noise outside, "fire at them, to the last man!"
"We are short of bullets. There's plenty of powder, but no lead." Ratz Andor drew a deep breath.
"A thousand devils! is there no shot?"
"No. There's a gun and two pistols loaded--that's all."
"Give me a pistol!" whispered the robber, holding out his hand to Viola; and when his comrade, who understood the purport of the request, handed him the weapon, he clutched it with an eager hand, muttering--
"Let them come now! They won't take me alive, I warrant you!"
"I say!" whispered the butcher, pointing to Ratz Andor, "is he dead?"
"No; don't you see him breathing?"
"But he'll die!--don't you think he'll die! I say, Viola, don't you think we'd better surrender? Perhaps they'll grant us a pardon."
"A pardon? If they don't shoot us, I'll give you my word of honour they will hang us before to-morrow night."
"I don't mean a full pardon," whispered the wretch, as if choking with fear; "not to pardon us so that we may go about; but perhaps they'll lock us up--say five years, ten years, I would not mind twenty years, and whip us every month, and make us starve and work--I would not mind it in the least, if they don't hang us. Don't you think, Viola, they would pardon me, if I were to beseech them--if I were to go down upon my knees, intreating them to spare my life. You see, Viola, I am so young.
I never killed anybody! I never hit any one to-night!"
"Poor fellow!" said Viola, as he gently disengaged his hand from the trembling grasp of his comrade, "don't tell these things to me--tell your judges.--But what is this!" cried he, pointing to a corner of the hut--"what is that smoke?"
"The hut is on fire!"
"Hurrah!"
"Let fly at them! Exterminate them! Kick them back into the fire!"
shouted Mr. Skinner, outside.
"They have put fire to the hut!" cried Viola, shuddering.
Ratz Andor opened his eyes, and, half leaning on his hands, he looked around. "Don't be caught alive;" gasped he, "and, if you can, shoot the judge, and die as a man!"
These were the robber's last words; for, raising his pistol, he pressed the muzzle to his head. His hot blood fell on Viola's hands.
"Our father!" groaned the butcher, kneeling down--"they'll burn us to cinders--which art in heaven--give me the bottle, I'll put it out--Heaven help us, it is brandy--it burns like h.e.l.l--hallowed be thy name--Viola, you're the death of us--and forgive us--why did you steal the notary's papers?"
At this juncture the miserable man raised the bottle to his lips and drank, until, overcome with the combined effects of the liquor and the smoke, he fell down by the side of Ratz Andor.
His last words reminded Viola of the papers, which he had forgotten in the excitement of the conflict. He was resolved to bury himself amidst the burning ruins of the hut. Susi need not then take her children to the gallows to show them their father's grave. But, as it was, he felt he was compelled to live. His family had received protection at Tengelyi's hands. The papers were of the greatest importance for the notary. He could not allow them to be burned, nor could he leave the world under a suspicion of having ruined his benefactor. It was utterly impossible.
The fire and the heat increased in violence and intensity. Viola's hair was singed, he could not breathe the hot air, he could not see. In another moment his escape from the hut was impossible. He seized the papers, opened the door, and rushed out.
Mr. Skinner's party had not for the last few minutes heard any sounds proceeding from the interior of the hut. They saw it in flames, and they saw that no attempt to leave it was made by the people inside. They felt convinced that the robbers had somehow or other effected their escape.
The report of the pistol, by which Ratz Andor put a term to his sufferings, confirmed them in their opinion, for it caused them to believe that the explosion was owing to the fire having reached some weapon which had been left behind. Even Messrs. Skinner and Catspaw, though sorely disappointed, ventured to approach the hut; and so it happened that when Viola, gasping, half blind, and all but choked, left the hut, holding the papers, wrapped up in a cloak, in his hand, he ran into the clutches of these two men.
Mr. Catspaw s.n.a.t.c.hed the papers from him and ran back, while the Pandurs hastened to the spot and surrounded Viola. The robber was unarmed; but his appearance, his notorious strength, and the terror of his name, which every one of his pursuers shouted, as if for the express purpose of frightening his fellows, made even the boldest cautious of coming too near him; if his hand had held a weapon, if there had been strength in his arm, he might have broken through their ranks. But Viola did not think of resistance. His agonies, both of body and mind, had overcome the iron strength of his frame. He opened his eyes, but he could not see. His chest heaved violently; his arms trembled as he raised them to find a means of support. In another moment he lay senseless on the ground, and his enemies struggled for the honour of binding him. Mr.
Skinner was obliged to exert the whole of his authority to put a stop to the frantic cheers of his followers, and arrangements were made to take the prisoner to St. Vilmosh, when low groans and cries for help were heard from the burning hut. They shuddered and were silent. Nothing was heard but the crackling of the fire and the loud wailing of the wretched man inside. At length one of the Pandurs stepped forward.
"I'll try to get him out!" said he.
He advanced.
A fearful explosion put a stop to his progress. The gunpowder, which the robbers kept in the hut, caught fire and finished the work of destruction. The wailing ceased with the flash of powder, which hurled the roof of the hut into the air and strewed the turf with its burning fragments. Mr. Skinner's party were horror-struck.
"Bad job that!" said the inspector, who was the first to recover from his surprise. "D--n the fellows!"
"Is it all over?" cried the justice, from his place of refuge behind a tree.
"Yes, your worship."
"But is there no more powder in the place?"
"It's in the nature of powder," said the inspector, "that it blows up in a lump. But your worship need not come here, for our business is done.
I'll have the robber carried by some of the men."
Viola, who was still in a fainting state, was lifted on the shoulders of two strong fellows, and the whole troop proceeded towards St.
Vilmosh.
"Did you get the papers?" whispered Mr. Skinner to Mr. Catspaw.
"Yes," whispered the attorney; "I've thrown them into the fire."