The Thin Red Line; and Blue Blood - LightNovelsOnl.com
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INSIDE THE FORTRESS.
It is time to return to Stanislas McKay, whose life, forfeited under the ruthless laws of a semi-barbarous power, still hung by a thread.
He had been taken into Sebastopol by his escort at a rapid pace. It was a ride of half-a-dozen miles, no more, and the greater part of it, when once they regained the Tchernaya, followed the low ground that margins both sides of the river.
McKay could see plainly the English cavalry vedettes in the plain; but, fast bound as he was, it was impossible for him to make any signal to his friends. It was as well that he could not try, for he would certainly have paid the penalty with his life.
They watched him very closely, these wild, unkempt, half-savage hors.e.m.e.n; watched him as though he were a captive animal--a beast of prey which might at any time break loose and rend them.
But the rough uncivilised Cossacks of the Don were not bad fellows after all.
Although they at first looked askance at him when he spoke to them, these simple boors were presently won over by the distress and sufferings of their prisoner.
McKay was in great pain; his bonds cut into his flesh, he was exhausted by the night's work, dejected at the ruin of his enterprise, uneasy as to his fate.
No food had crossed his lips for many hours, his throat was parched and dry under the fierce heat of the sun.
He begged piteously for water, speaking in Russian, and using the most familiar style of address. The men who rode on each side of him soon thawed as he called them "his little fathers," and implored them to give him a drink.
"Presently, at the first halt," they said.
And so he had to battle with his thirst while they still hurried on.
Suddenly the officer in command called a halt--they had now reached the picket-house at Tractir Bridge--and rode out to the flank of the party. He seemed perturbed, anxious in his mind, and raised his hand to shroud his eyes as he peered eagerly across the plain.
"Here!" he shouted, rising in his stirrups and turning round. "Bring up the prisoner."
McKay was led to his side.
"What is the meaning of that?" asked the officer haughtily, speaking in French, as he pointed to a cloud of dust in the distant plain.
"How can I tell you?" replied McKay, shortly: but in his own mind he was certain that this was the contemplated extension of the French and Sardinian lines towards the Tchernaya. For a moment his heart beat high with the hope that this movement might help him to escape.
"You know, you rogue! Tell me, or it will be the worse for you."
"I don't know," replied McKay stoutly; "and if I did I should not tell you."
"Dirty spy! You would have sold us for a price, do the same now by the others. You owe them no allegiance; besides, you are in our power.
Tell me, and I will let you go."
"Your bribe is wasted on me. I am a British officer--"
"Pshaw! Officer?" and the fellow raised his whip to strike McKay, but happily held his hand.
"Here! take him back," he said angrily, and McKay was again placed in the midst of the party.
He renewed his entreaties for a drink, and a Cossack, taking pity on him, offered him a canteen.
It was full of _vodkhi_, an ardent spirit beloved by the Russian peasant, half-a-dozen drops of which McKay managed to gulp down, but they nearly burned his throat.
"Water! water!" he asked again.
And the Cossack, evidently surprised at his want of taste, subst.i.tuted the simpler fluid; but the charitable act drew down upon him the displeasure of his chief.
"How dare you! without my permission?" cried the officer, as he dashed the water from McKay's lips, and punished the offending Cossack by a few sharp strokes with his whip.
"Come, fall in!" the officer next said. "It won't do to linger here."
And the party resumed their ride, still in the valley, but as far as possible from the stream.
Every yard McKay's hopes sank lower and lower; every yard took him further from his friends, who were advancing, he felt certain, towards the river. Large bodies of troops, columns of infantry on the march, covered by cavalry and accompanied by guns, were now perfectly visible in the distant plain.
"Look to your front!" cried the Russian officer peremptorily to Stanislas, as he stole a furtive, lingering glance back. "Faster! Spur your horses, or we may be picked up or shot."
All hope was gone now. This was the end of the Tchernaya valley. Up there opposite were the Inkerman heights, the sloping hills that a few months before McKay had helped to hold. This paved, much-worn causeway was the "Sappers' Road," leading round the top of the harbour into the town.
No one stopped the Cossacks.
They pa.s.sed a picket in a half-ruined guard-house, the roof of which, its door, walls, and windows, were torn and shattered in the fierce and frequent bombardments. Even at that moment a round shot crashed over their heads, took the ground further off, and bounded away. The sentry asked no questions. Some one looked out and waved his hand in greeting to the Cossack officer, who replied, pointing ahead, as the party rode rapidly on.
Time pressed; it promised to be a warm morning. The besiegers' fire, intended no doubt to distract attention from the movements in the Tchernaya, was constantly increasing.
"What dog's errand is this they sent me on?" growled the Cossack officer, as a sh.e.l.l burst close to him and killed one of the escort.
"Faster! faster!"
And still, hara.s.sed by shot and sh.e.l.l, they pushed on.
All this time the road led by the water's edge; but presently they left it, and, crossing the head of a creek, mounted a steep hill, which brought them to the Karabel suburb, as it was called, a detached part of the main town, now utterly wrecked and ruined by the besiegers' fire.
The Cossack officer made his way to a large barrack occupying a central elevated position, and dismounted at the princ.i.p.al doorway.
"Is it thou, Stoschberg?" cried a friend who came out to meet him.
"Here, in Sebastopol?"
"To my sorrow. Where is the general? I have news for him. The enemy are moving in force upon the Tchernaya."
"Ha! is it so? And that has brought you here?"
"That, and the escort of yonder villain--a rascally spy, whom we caught last night in our lines."
"Bring him along too; the general may wish to question him."
McKay was unbound, ordered to dismount, and then, still under escort, was marched into the building. It was roofless, but an inner chamber had been constructed--a cellar, so to speak--under the ground-floor, with a roof of its own of rammed earth many feet thick, supported by heavy beams. This was one of the famous casemates invented by Todleben, impervious to shot and sh.e.l.l, and affording a safe shelter to the troops.
McKay was halted at the door or aperture, across which hung a common yellow rug. The officers pa.s.sed in, and their voices, with others, were heard in animated discussion, which lasted some minutes; then the one called Stoschberg came out and fetched McKay.
He found himself in an underground apartment plainly but comfortably furnished. In the centre, under a hanging lamp, was a large table covered with maps and plans, and at the table sat a tall, handsome man, still in the prime of life. He was dressed in the usual long plain great-coat of coa.r.s.e drab cloth, but he had shoulder-straps of broad gold lace, and his flat m.u.f.fin cap lying in front of him was similarly ornamented. This personage, an officer of rank evidently, looked up sharply, and addressed McKay in French.