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Viola, rus.h.i.+ng back into the hut, locked the door, and waked the butcher by giving him a kick.
"Did I not tell you so?" said the old robber, getting up, and seizing a double-barrelled gun; "and there the fellow lies! he's as drunk as David's sow."
Ratz Andor was wrong. The poor fellow, who bore his kick with the forbearance of an angel, grew quite sober when they told him of the approach of the enemy. "Is there no means of escape?" whispered he.
"We are surrounded!" said Viola. "If there are not too many of them, we are safe. Are the guns and pistols loaded?"
"They are; four double-barrelled guns, and six pistols. Let them come on! we'll give them their supper." We need scarcely remark that it was Ratz Andor who said these words.
"Light the lamp. Put it into a corner, that it may not be seen from without. Throw ashes on the fire!"
The butcher obeyed tremblingly.
"Now, Ratz, you and I, we'll stand by the two cuttings in the door. You, butcher, look to the sides; and if anybody comes up to the house, you'd better shoot him. You can have a shot at either side. But don't allow any of the rascals to put their guns through the cuttings. Cheer up, boy, you are safe enough!"
Viola and Andor, gun in hand, stood by the door, keeping a look out through the small cuttings, or loop-holes, by which the walls of the building were pierced. The butcher walked to and fro in the background.
He trembled violently, and vowed reformation if he could only manage to escape with his life.
"The birds are roosting!" cried a loud shrill voice, which evidently proceeded from Mr. Skinner. "They are there! I see a light in the hut.
Is it surrounded on all sides?"
Forty or fifty voices, which answered to this call, informed the robbers that there was no chance of escape. The butcher knelt down, and made the sign of the cross.
"You dog! I'll shoot you!" said Ratz Andor. "Stand up, and be a man.
Stand by your cutting, and let fly at them!" The butcher obeyed.
"Robbers, I call on you to surrender!" cried Mr. Skinner. "If you refuse to surrender on this summons of the county, you are liable to be tried by court-martial."
All was silent in the hut, and the justice gave the word of command.
"At them, you rascals! Break the door. At them!"
A rush was made against the door; but before the axes of the a.s.sailants could touch it, the report of two muskets was heard. Two Pandurs fell; the rest retreated; and Ratz Andor shouted from the hut: "Come on!"
At that moment the butcher likewise fired his piece. He too brought down one of the judge's men. This frightened the besiegers, who turned and fled. They paused for a time. The robbers reloaded their muskets, while the besiegers a.s.sembled round Mr. Skinner and the inspector. Mr.
Catspaw, with a modesty which did him infinite credit, kept at a distance.
"I don't see how we _can_ catch them," said the inspector, leaning on his broad sabre, which had done good service in the insurrection of 1809, and of which the blade, which bore the mark of "Fringia," could not have been in better hands.
"Make another onset, and another and another!" cried the justice, stamping his foot. "Don't leave off until you've got them, the rascals, and bound them and hanged them!"
"I'll do it, if it can be done!"
"_Can_ be done? There is nothing but _can_ be done when I command!"
"Very well!" said the inspector, angrily. "It won't be _my_ fault if it is not done. I'll stick to the mark any day if your men don't turn tail."
"If the fellows don't go, they are dogs and cowards! Knock them down, and be----"
"Well, sir, all I can say is, you'd better lead them to the charge, and knock them down at your liking, I'm not made for that sort of thing."
"No, sir!" said Mr. Skinner, doggedly. "That's not my post. It is my duty to superintend and conduct the affair."
"You're a--never mind! Go at them, my men!" shouted the inspector. The justice repeated the words of command with a still louder tone; and Mr.
Catspaw's shrill voice was heard echoing the words from behind a distant oak. The inspector, flouris.h.i.+ng his sword, and followed by the Pandurs and peasants, advanced towards the hut, but they were again fired at from within. The report of the muskets was followed by deep groans, which showed that the robbers had taken a good aim.
The Pandurs retreated. "On with you! Go on! before they've had time to charge! There's no danger now!" and the inspector, followed by a few of his boldest men, made another rush at the door. Another discharge! The inspector had his left arm broken, and one of the Pandurs was shot through the body.
"On! at them!" shouted the leader, nothing daunted; "they've got no powder now! On! on!" and, seizing an axe, he advanced again, while his men, partly because they believed that the robbers were short of ammunition, and partly yielding to the excitement of the combat, loaded their pieces and followed him. But musket after musket was fired by the robbers inside, and almost each shot took effect. The wailings of the wounded, the oaths of the besieged and the besiegers, the reports of the muskets, and the glaring flash which accompanied each discharge, were made still more fearful and startling by the darkness of the night; while the inspector's voice, as he urged his men on, was distinctly heard in the midst of the general confusion.
"Give me that piece!" shouted he, flinging his axe, and s.n.a.t.c.hing a musket from the hand of a Pandur. "Now that's for you, Viola!" and he fired it into the hut.
A scream and a heavy fall was heard. But before the inspector could vent his joy in words, the fire was returned from within, and the peasant who stood at his side had his skull s.h.i.+vered. "Give me another musket!"
roared the inspector, but in vain; the Pandurs hastened back to the judge, who stood at a safe distance, cursing and urging the combatants on. Their leader, finding that he was left to fight the battle alone, returned likewise, with his shoulder pierced by a bullet.
"Why, you cursed rascals! how dare you come back? Where's the robber?"
cried the intrepid judge, flinging down his pipe in a paroxysm of rage.
"Where is Viola? how dare you come back without him?"
n.o.body answered. One of the Pandurs stooped for the pipe, which, strange to say, was not broken.
"Knock the ashes out and give it a good cleaning, you rogue! It won't draw!" said the justice; and, turning to the others, he proceeded: "Did I not order you to bring the robber? to seize him and bind him?"
"Your wors.h.i.+p," said one of the men, "we did all that men can do. There are four of us killed, and half the rest wounded. They've broken the inspector's arm."
"There are at least ten robbers in the hut. The cuttings are black with the muzzles of their guns. It's quite impossible to go up."
"Impossible? who dares to say any thing is impossible? I'd like to see the man who dares to say it! Impossible? when _I_ say it _is_ possible!
why you scurvy----"
"He's right!" said the inspector. "If you would take Viola, you must have better men than the like of these."
"But I say they shall take him! I'd like to know who is the master, you or I?"
"Your wors.h.i.+p had better try. I've done my duty, and I'm done for, at least for this night. Both my hands are disabled; I am not a match for a child in arms."
Mr. Skinner shook his head.
"I was not aware, sir,--it's a pity you are wounded. The wounded must of course fall back. As for the rest, let them stand in a line. Well done!
March! March! Ma----"
The word of command was broken off by another discharge from the hut, and the line, which had begun to move, fell back in disorder. As for Mr. Skinner, he took refuge behind a tree. He knew that his safety was essential to the success of the expedition.
"Forward, you cowards! March! March!" shouted he; but none obeyed.
"March! I say. Will you, or not?" screamed the justice, collaring the man who stood next to him.
"No, I will not!" said the man, as he slipped aside.