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"And if it had been impossible for you to come? If it had been an utterly critical moment in every way, what would you have done?"
He laughed a little, quietly, as he looked at her. "The question did not arise, fortunately," he replied.
"No," she admitted; "only I felt a little curious to know, now that everything is over. It _is_, isn't it? There is nothing to be done?"
"Oh yes," he replied with indomitable cheerfulness. "There is always something to be done."
"A chance?" she whispered incredulously. "A chance of escape, you mean?"
"It is possible," he said. "At least, I will go and hear what they have to say."
"No! no!" she cried out, as a dreadful scene rose to her imagination.
"You cannot understand. Don't you hear that?... They would kill you."
"I do not suppose that I shall find myself popular," he said with a smile, "but I will take care. You--I think you must stay here."
"Cannot I come with you?" she pleaded. "See, I am armed."
He took the tiny weapon that she drew from her dress and looked at it with gentle amus.e.m.e.nt. It was a pretty thing of ivory and nickeled steel, an elaborate toy. He pressed the action and shook out the half-dozen tiny loaded caps--they were little more than that--upon his palm.
"I would rather that you did not use this upon a mob," he said, reloading it. "It would only exasperate, without disabling. As for stopping a rush--why, I doubt if one of these would stop a determined rabbit. You have better weapons than this."
"I suppose you are right. Only it gave me a little confidence. Then you shall keep it for a memento, if you will."
"No; it might hold off a single a.s.sailant, I suppose. I should value this much more, if I might have it." He touched a silk tie that she had about her neck, as he spoke; it was one that she had often worn. She held up her head for him to disengage it.
"Some day," he said, lingering a little over the simple operation, "you will understand many things, Irene."
"I think that I understand everything now," she replied with a brave glance. "Everything that is worth understanding."
He placed the folded tie in an inner pocket, and went down the stone steps without another word. The well was thick with smoke, but the fire had not yet spread beyond the lower rooms. Half-way down he encountered a barricade of light office furniture which the girl had flung across the stairs and drenched with oil. It was no obstacle in itself, but at the touch of a match it would have sprung into a conflagration that would have held the wildest mob at bay for a few precious moments. He picked his way through it, descended the remaining stairs, and unlocked the outer door. Beyond this was an iron curtain that had been lowered. A little door in it opened directly on to the half-dozen steps that led down to Seaton Street.
Salt looked through a crevice of the iron curtain, and listened long enough to learn that there was no one on the upper steps; for the upper steps, indeed, commanded no view of the windows, and the windows were the centres of all interest. Satisfied on this point, he quietly unlocked the door and stepped out.
CHAPTER XX
STOBALT OF SALAVEIRA
To the majority of those who thronged Seaton Street the effect of Salt's sudden--instantaneous, as it seemed--and unexpected appearance was to endow it with a dramatic, almost an uncanny, value. The front rows, especially those standing about the steps, fell back, and the further rows pressed forward. And because an undisciplined mob stricken by acute surprise must express its emotion outwardly--by silence if it has. .h.i.therto been noisy, and by exclamation if it has been silent--the shouts and turmoil in the street instantly dwindled away to nothing, like a breath of vapour pa.s.sing from a window pane.
Salt raised his hand, and he had the tribute of unstirring silence, the silence for the moment of blank astonishment.
"My friends and enemies," he said, in a voice that had learned self-possession from the same school that Demosthenes had practised in, "you have been calling me for some time. In a few minutes I must listen to whatever you have to say, but first there is another matter that we must arrange. I take it for granted that when you began your spirited demonstration here you had no idea that there was a lady in the building. Not being accustomed to the sterner side of politics, so formidable a display rather disconcerted her, and not knowing the invariable chivalry of English working men, she hesitated to come out before. Now, as it is dark, and the streets of London are not what they once were, I want half a dozen good stout fellows to see the lady safely to her home."
"Be d.a.m.ned!" growled a voice among the ma.s.s. "What do you take us for?"
"Men," retorted Salt incisively; "or there would be no use in asking you."
"Yes, men, but famished, desperate, werewolf men," cried a poor, gaunt creature clad in grotesque rags, who stood near. "Men who have seen _our_ women starve and sink before our eyes; men who have watched _our_ children dying by a slower, crooler death than fire. An eye for an eye, tyrant! Your League has struck at _our_ women folk through us."
"Then strike at ours through us!" cried Salt, stilling with the measured pa.s.sion of his voice the rising murmurs of a.s.sent. "I am here to offer you a subst.i.tute. Do you think that no woman will mourn for me?" He sent his voice ringing over their heads like a prophetic knell. "The cause that must stoop to take the life of a defenceless woman is lost for ever."
As long as he could offer them surprises he could hold the mere mob in check, but there was among the crowd an element that was not of the crowd, a chosen sprinkling who were superior to the swaying pa.s.sions of the moment.
"Not good enough," said a decently-dressed, comfortable-looking man, who had little that was famished, desperate, or wolfish in his appearance.
"You're both there, and there you shall both stay, by G.o.d! Eh, comrades?" He spoke decisively, and made a movement as though he would head a rush towards the steps.
Salt dropped one hand upon the iron door with a laugh that sounded more menacing than most men's threats.
"Not so fast, Rorke," he said contemptuously; "you grasp too much. Even in your unpleasant business you can practise moderation. I am here, but there is no reason on earth why I should stay. Scarcely more than half an hour ago I was at Hanwood--where, by the way, your friends are being rather badly crumpled up--and you are all quite helpless to prevent me going again."
They guessed the means; they saw the unanswerable strength of his position, and recognised their own impotence. "Who are you, any way?"
came a dozen voices.
"I am called George Salt: possibly you have heard the name before. Come, men," he cried impatiently, "what have you to think twice about? Surely it is worth while to let a harmless girl escape to make certain of that terrible person Salt."
There was a strangled scream in the vestibule behind. Unable to bear the suspense any longer, Irene had crept down the stairs in time to hear the last few sentences. For a minute she had stood transfixed at the horror of the position she realised; then, half-frenzied, she flung herself against Salt's arm and tried to beat her way past to face the mob.
"You shall not!" she cried distractedly. "I will not be saved at that price. I shall throw myself out of the window, into the fire, anywhere.
Yes, I'm desperate, but I know what I am saying. Come back, and let us wait together; die together, if it is to be, but I don't go alone."
The crowd began to surge restlessly about in waves of excited motion.
The interruption, in effect, had been the worst thing that could have happened. There were in the throng many who beneath their seething pa.s.sion could appreciate the n.o.bility of Salt's self-sacrifice; many who in the midst of their sullen enmity were wrung with admiration for Irene's heroic spirit, but the contagion to press forward dominated all.
Salt had irretrievably lost his hold upon their reason, and with that hold he saw the last straw of his most forlorn hope floating away. In another minute he must either retreat into the burning building where he might at any time find the stairs impa.s.sable with smoke, or remain to be overwhelmed by a savage rush and beaten to the ground.
"Men," cried Irene desperately, "listen before you do something that will for ever make to-day shameful in the history of our country. Do you know whom you wish to kill? He is the greatest Englishman----"
There were angry cries from firebrands scattered here and there among the crowd, and a movement from behind, where the new contingents hurrying down the side streets pressed most heavily, flung the nearest rows upon the lower steps. Salt's revolver, which he had not shown before, drove them back again and gave him a moment's grace.
"Quick!" he cried. "My offer still holds good."
One man shouldered his way through to the front, and, seeing him, Salt allowed him to come on. He walked up the steps deliberately, with a face sad rather than revengeful, and they spoke together hurriedly under the shadow of the large-bore revolver.
"If it can be done yet, I'll be one of the posse to see to the young lady," said the volunteer. "I have no mind to wait for the other job that's coming."
"Take care of her; get her back into the hall," replied Salt. "Gently, very gently, friend."
Two more volunteers had their feet upon the steps, one, a butcher, reeking of the stalls, the other sleek and smug-faced, with the appearance of a prosperous artisan.
"I'll pick my men," cried Salt sharply, and his steady weapon emphasised his choice, one man pa.s.sing on through the iron doorway, the other turning sharp from the insistent barrel to push his way back into the crowd with a bitter imprecation.
It was too much to hope that the position could be maintained. The impatient mob had only been held off momentarily from its purpose as a pack of wolves can be stayed by the fleeing traveller who throws from his sleigh article after article to entice their curiosity. Salt had nothing more to offer them. His life was already a hostage to the honour of those whom he had allowed to pa.s.s. Others were pressing on to him with vengeance-laden cries. The terrible irresistible forward surge of a soulless mob, when individuality is merged into the dull brutishness of a trampling herd, was launched.
"Capt'n Stobalt!" cried a l.u.s.ty voice at his shoulder.