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"If you will help me get away from here I'll make you a rich man. You shall have a thousand florins."
"If you had promised me less I should have believed you sooner."
"But I will pay you the money now. Come, take me on your back and carry me away."
"Where to?"
"Into the church yonder."
The gipsy laughed aloud. "First do your swearing out here, then," said he, "for no one may curse G.o.d in his house. But what will you do in the church?"
"I will wait while you run to Gyertyamos and hire a carriage for me. You shall have a thousand florins, the driver the same, and for every hour before sunrise that you accomplish your errand you shall receive an extra hundred."
"You won't see the sun rise," muttered the fiddler to himself as he obeyed the other's directions.
The burden proved not too heavy for the little man's back; he could have carried him all the way to Gyertyamos, but the horse must obey his rider, so into the church he went with him.
"There, Mana.s.seh," he cried, in triumph, "there's our man!" And he dropped his burden on the stone floor.
Diurbanu cried out with pain as he fell, then raised himself on one elbow and met Mana.s.seh's gaze.
"Kill me and be done with it," he muttered, in sullen despair.
But Mana.s.seh remained standing with folded arms before him. "No, Benjamin Vajdar," said he, "you shall not die by my hand. He who kills Cain is seven times cursed. My promise to an angel whom you would have destroyed is your safeguard. I shall neither kill you myself nor let any one else lay hands on you. You are to live many days yet and continue in the way you have begun, obeying the sinful impulses of your wicked nature, and doing evil to those that have done nothing but good to you.
You weigh upon our house like a curse, but it is G.o.d's will thus to prove and try our hearts. Fulfil your destiny, plot your wicked scheme's against us, and then at last, broken, humbled, scorned of all the world beside, come back to us and sue for pity at the door of those to whom you have shown no pity. G.o.d's will be done!"
Mana.s.seh allowed himself to use no reproach, no word of withering scorn, in thus addressing his enemy. He even spoke in German, to spare the fallen man's shame in the gipsy's presence. He had the horse in readiness for its master, and bade the fiddler help him lift the injured rider into the saddle and tie him there with ropes to ensure him against a second fall, especially as one foot was now unfit for the stirrup.
"Aha!" cried the little gipsy, "a good idea! We'll take him alive and show him off in Toroczko."
The fires in the village made the spirited horse restive and hard to manage. Mana.s.seh took him by the bridle and led him out of the church, the gipsy following at the animal's heels.
"Turn to the right and begone!" whispered Mana.s.seh to the rider, and he caused the horse to make a sudden spring to one side.
"Oh, he's got away!" cried the gipsy, in great chagrin. "Why didn't you let me take the bridle? Catch me bringing you another thousand-florin prize, to be thrown away like that!"
"Never mind, my lad. From this day on you shall find a full trencher always ready for you at our house. But now let us start for home."
Six weeks later Benjamin Vajdar made his reappearance in Vienna, the net result of his expedition to Transylvania being, first, a heavy draft on the bank-account of his chief, and, second, a limping gait for himself, which proved a sad affliction to him on the dancing-floor.
CHAPTER XXIV.
A CRUEL PARTING.
At the close of the war the young men of Toroczko who had served in the national guard returned home and resumed their work in the mines and iron foundries. The mining cla.s.ses had always been exempt from military service in the imperial army, and so the Toroczko young men had no fear of being soon called away again from their peaceful industry.
Out of these young artisans Mana.s.seh set about forming a guild for the better working of the Toroczko mines. He wished to make intelligent and skilful mining engineers of them, and so enable them to avail themselves, more fully than they had yet done, of the mineral resources of their native hills. And having now had some experience of military discipline, these young men offered him material of no mean order for his experiment. They seconded his efforts with a will, reposing the utmost confidence in their leader, and perceiving that he knew thoroughly what he was undertaking.
It was a great piece of good fortune for Mana.s.seh that he had a partner in his enterprise who was in fullest sympathy with him, and in whom he could place the utmost trust. This partner kept the accounts of the business in which the two had invested their all, and showed the keenest intelligence and the most watchful vigilance in guarding their joint interests. This expert accountant and able manager was none other than Mana.s.seh's wife. In the third year of her marriage, however, she had something else to engage her attention beside iron-mining: in that year the house of Adorjan was increased by the birth of twins,--Bela and Ilonka, the former a likeness in miniature of his father, and the latter a second Blanka. But their aunt Anna insisted on sharing the mother's cares, and soon she a.s.sumed almost entire charge of the little ones, thus enabling Blanka to resume her business duties.
In this way everything was running smoothly, when one evening there came a government order requiring all men between certain ages to report within three days at Karlsburg for military service; any who refused would be treated as deserters. Three quarters of Mana.s.seh's workmen came under the terms of this order; but they promptly obeyed and went to Karlsburg, where, after being found physically qualified, they were enrolled for six years' service,--three extra years being added to the usual term because they had neglected to report voluntarily.
This was a hard blow to Mana.s.seh's enterprise. He resolved to go to Vienna and pet.i.tion for the exemption of his employees from military duty, claiming for them the miners' privileges which they had enjoyed hitherto.
Well acquainted though he had been in government circles in the past, Mana.s.seh now found everything changed and scarcely a familiar face left.
Like the veriest stranger, he was forced to wait with the crowd of other pet.i.tioners in the war minister's anteroom until his turn should come.
Much to his surprise, however, the great man's door suddenly opened and Prince Cagliari advanced to meet him with a face all smiles and words of honey on his lips.
"Ah, my dear friend, how glad I am to see you!" began the prince. "All well at home? That's good. And what brings you hither, may I ask? You come on behalf of your countrymen who were recently drafted? Ah, yes."
(Then in a whispered aside: "We'll soon arrange that; a word from me will suffice.") Again aloud: "A very difficult matter, sir, very difficult indeed! These recent complications in the Orient compel us to raise our army to its highest effective strength." (Once more in a whisper, with a stealthy pressure of the hand: "Pray give yourself not the slightest concern. I'll speak to his Excellency about it this very minute.")
Mana.s.seh was by no means pleased at finding himself placed under obligations to Prince Cagliari, but he could not well refuse such a gracious offer of a.s.sistance. Accordingly, when the prince returned and smilingly informed him that he had put the pet.i.tion in the minister's hands, and obtained a promise that it should be speedily taken under favourable consideration, Mana.s.seh forced himself to smile in return and to express his acknowledgments to his intercessor as he took leave of him.
The pet.i.tion was, in fact, taken under early advis.e.m.e.nt, and three days after Mana.s.seh's return to Toroczko he was summoned to Karlsburg to learn the issue.
"Your memorial has reached us from Vienna with a refusal," was the chilling announcement that greeted him.
"Impossible!" cried Mana.s.seh, in astonishment. "I was promised a favourable answer."
The government official only shrugged his shoulders and laughed.
"On what ground is the pet.i.tion rejected?" asked Mana.s.seh.
"On the ground that those for whom you pet.i.tion forfeited their privileges as miners by taking up arms in '48. Having taken them up once, they cannot refuse to do so a second time."
Mana.s.seh's bitter reflections were somewhat sweetened by the thought that, after all, he was not in any way indebted to Prince Cagliari. But he owed him more than he suspected. As he was turning to go, the government official detained him a moment longer.
"I hope," said he, as if by way of a casual remark, "that your own exemption from service is a matter of no uncertainty."
"My own exemption!" repeated Mana.s.seh, in amazement. It had not once occurred to him that he, a former government councillor, might be drafted into the army. But he controlled his indignation at what seemed an ill-timed jest, and added, calmly: "At any rate, I cannot be charged with having forfeited my rights as a miner by taking up arms in 1848."
"That remains to be seen," was the cool reply. Then, after some search among his papers, the official produced a doc.u.ment from which he read as follows: "'Mr. Mana.s.seh Adorjan is alleged, on unquestionable authority, to have partic.i.p.ated in the fight at St. George and Toroczko. In fact, he with his own hands took General Diurbanu prisoner and bound him with a rope to his horse. Only the animal's impatience of control saved the rider and secured him his freedom.'"
After listening to this astounding accusation against him, Mana.s.seh recognised that he was far more deeply in Cagliari's debt than he had supposed.
"I have accomplished my mission in brilliant style," was his report when he reached home. "Not only my workmen are drafted, but I also along with them."
The women were struck with consternation, but Aaron burst out laughing.
"Oh, you poor innocent!" he cried, "how can you be a soldier with one shoulder six inches higher than the other?"