Jack Harkaway's Boy Tinker Among The Turks - BestLightNovel.com
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After what they had witnessed, they were prepared to credit Mr. Mole's most extravagant a.s.sertions.
"Would you have some further proof of my great courage?" demanded Mr.
Mole, folding his arms and striking a defiant att.i.tude.
"Brave man, what more can you show us of your courage?" was the reply.
"Behold!" cried Mole.
The whole a.s.sembly eyed Mr. Mole's movements with the greatest curiosity now.
"Bring me a dozen sharp implements, such as swords, knives, daggers, etc, etc."
They were brought to him, and he then laid them down in a row upon the carpet.
The first was a needle of the dimensions of an ordinary bodkin.
Next this, was a small iron skewer.
After this came a long-bladed dagger knife.
And finally, there was a cut-and-thrust sword of alarming dimensions.
"You shall see now," said Mole, sternly, "how I can despise such trivialities as your bastinado."
What was he about to do now?
In solemn silence, Mr. Mole bared his right calf, then requested the company of his black servant Tinker, who was still in the hall.
The request was granted.
"Tinker."
"Yes, Ma.s.sa Mole."
"Go and fetch me----"
Here he sank his voice to a whisper, and the rest of his instructions were heard by no one save the darkey, for whom they were intended.
In the course of a few moments, Tinker returned and pa.s.sed something slyly into Mr. Mole's hand.
It was a small sponge in an oil-skin bag.
Yet it appeared to be saturated with something, to judge by the way it was handled, for Mr. Mole slyly put it in his pocket.
Mr. Mole then took up the smallest of the row of implements just described.
"Behold what an Englishman can do!"
And then to the amazement of the spectators, he thrust the needle into the thick part of his calf.
A quiet smile played about the corners of his mouth.
But no sign of the slightest suffering.
"Judge how much your bastinado can affect me," he said, with superb disdain.
"Allah be praised!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the Turk; "wondrous man."
"Behold," pursued Mole, picking up the skewer.
He pa.s.sed it fairly through his calf, and stood there with his foot firmly planted on the ground, gazing about him like another "monarch of all he surveyed."
"Look again."
And Mole took up a large nail, and hammered it into his foot, so that he was pinned to the floor.
"Allah be praised!" again shouted the Turks.
"One more proof," he said, disdainfully.
He picked up another dagger, and pushed it resolutely into the ill-used leg.
At the same time he held the calf with his left hand, in which he concealed, with considerable dexterity, the sponge which Tinker had brought him.
Blood now trickled slowly through Mr. Mole's fingers, and ran down his legs and feet.
A thrill of terror pa.s.sed through the a.s.semblage.
"Yet another proof," exclaimed Mole, grandly.
"No more, no more," exclaimed the Turk.
Mole withdrew the nail from his foot, and the dagger from his leg, and seizing the sword, he thrust it with ferocious energy into the other mutilated leg.
He pressed his hand to the wound, and the blood flowed out in a small torrent, while the spectators groaned.
Mole looked round him proudly--defiantly.
Had he just conquered on the field of Waterloo, he could not have shown a greater apparent belief in himself.
He smiled sardonically as he bound up the wounded legs with his scarf.
Mr. Mole here nearly spoilt his exhibition of his marvellous power of endurance, for p.r.i.c.king his finger accidentally with a pin, he sang out l.u.s.tily, much to the astonishment of the Turks.
But he was lucky to recover himself in time before the Turks could divine what had occurred.
"You must invent something more violent than any punishment I have yet seen here, if you would subdue the soul of Isaac Mole."