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"Seven; but I will come up alone first and speak with the corporal."
Duxbridge was called quietly. The corporal had been dozing for twenty minutes, and he awoke with mind somewhat befogged.
The stranger below, who had been allowed to advance, now stepped up to where the corporal could scrutinize him.
"Why, I know this man," declared the corporal. "His name's Eusebio Davo.
He's a wealthy Tagalo, loyal to the government and a good man. What's the trouble, Senor Davo?"
"Corporal, I went south in the island to pick up some laborers from the Man.o.bo tribe. I got forty together and was on my way through this country, not knowing that the Moros were out. So we were caught, this afternoon, and taken before the Datto Hakkut. He ordered us into his ranks to fight. We demurred, and four of my fellows were cut down before my eyes. Then we accepted arms. But to-night we tried to creep through the datto's lines and get here. All but the six men with me were caught, and their fate must have been awful."
Senor Davo shuddered, then went on:
"I come to beseech you that you allow my poor fellows to come inside your lines. You know me, Corporal, and know that we're all right."
"Yes, bring your men inside our line," decided Corporal Duxbridge. "I'll vouch for you, Senor Davo, to our commanding officer."
Protesting his undying grat.i.tude, Davo went below for his men, and brought them inside the lines, a sorry looking lot of fellows who at once threw themselves down as if to sleep.
"You'll notify Sergeant Overton, of course?" suggested the soldier who had first halted Davo.
"You mind your business, Strong," Corporal Duxbridge rebuked him. "I'll notify the sergeant in good time."
But Hal, as it happened, was nearer than had been imagined. Un.o.bserved he had listened to the whole conversation. Now, Overton hastened silently away, awaking Lieutenant Holmes and ten soldiers. Without undue haste these marched down on Duxbridge's station.
"Halt! Who goes there?"
"The officer of the day and the sergeant of the guard," came the response, in Lieutenant Holmes's crisp tones.
"Advance, sir."
The seven new arrivals lay on the ground, apparently sound asleep. Davo had his hat over his face, and was snoring lightly.
"Who are these new men in camp, Corporal?" demanded Holmes sharply.
"Fugitives from the datto's lines, sir. I was about to notify the sergeant of the guard, sir."
"Don't let them get away," spoke Hal quickly to the men, "and remember that they're armed with steel! This fellow, who calls himself Davo is Vicente Tomba, a Tagalo who is right-hand man to the datto," added the sergeant, bending and s.n.a.t.c.hing the hat from the Tagalo's face.
It was truly Tomba, who, with a snarl, leaped to his feet ere Hal Overton could grab him.
"Shoot him!" ordered Lieutenant Holmes, as Tomba went over the trench and down the slope at sprinting speed. Three or four rifles spoke, but Tomba escaped in the darkness.
Not so, however, with the men Tomba had brought with him. Not one of them escaped. All were stretched on the ground senseless, having been clubbed with the b.u.t.ts of the soldiers' rifles. Then, a quick search under the s.h.i.+rt of each of the rascals, revealed a creese with blade ground to a razor edge.
"You see, Corporal," ripped out Sergeant Hal, "these scoundrels were going to watch their chance to knife you all in the dark. Then the Moros would have rushed in at this point, and----"
Hal's prediction was verified, at that instant, by the breaking out of a fiendish chorus of yells down the slope. The Moros, waiting below, were advancing to a night attack.
"Bugler of the guard! Sound the general alarm!" roared out Lieutenant Holmes's steady tones.
CHAPTER XXI
SCOUTING IN DEADLY EARNEST
It was a ferocious attack, promptly and staunchly met.
Soldiers in the field on campaign sleep in their full clothing, their rifles at their sides. It takes not more than ten seconds to turn a soldier out in the night, fully awake and ready for orders. The knowledge that their lives depend upon their promptness keeps the men in condition for quick obedience.
Even the Gatling was ready at the top of the hill. From point to point it was dragged, and wherever it was served the midnight a.s.sailants soon drew back.
For twenty minutes the conflict was kept up, often at closest quarters.
But at last the sounding of the Moro horns in the rear called off the a.s.sailants, who fled in the darkness.
"How did this all happen, Mr. Holmes?" asked Captain Freeman. "I must congratulate you on being alert and ready for the brown men."
"Sergeant Overton had just called me, sir. And I think you will wish to hear what he has to say."
Hal was sent for and reported instantly.
"I know, now, sir, why Tomba wanted to make my acquaintance, and that of Sergeant Terry, sir," Hal explained, and then told what had happened.
"How did Corporal Duxbridge ever happen to do a thing like that?"
demanded Freeman angrily.
"Tomba had already made the Corporal's acquaintance, sir. Tomba wanted to make mine, and Terry's, as soon as he knew the Thirty-fourth was coming to these southern islands. It was Tomba's belief that he could run a gang of creese men past us, and get inside where he could knife the nearest soldiers, and then let an attacking party in."
"If the Moros had ever gotten through our line they'd have wiped the camp out to-night," exclaimed Captain Freeman.
"Of course they would, sir, and that is the way in which Tomba, even in Manila, had planned to make our acquaintance, and use it for just such an undertaking as to-night's. It seems, sir, that having failed with us, he succeeded in getting on the right side of Corporal Duxbridge."
"Where, I wonder?" muttered the captain. "And where is the Corporal?"
"Just taken up above with the wounded, sir," replied Lieutenant Holmes.
"Corporal Duxbridge was. .h.i.t, sir."
"Let us go up to see him. Where are the six natives?"
"Tied, sir, and up with the wounded."
Corporal Duxbridge, when the commanding officer visited him, felt sheepish enough, despite the great pain he was in. He now readily explained how Tomba, under the a.s.sumed name of Davo, had made his acquaintance in Bantoc. Tomba had spent money so freely in entertaining him that Duxbridge had been certain that the man must be a wealthy, good-natured Tagalo.
"I hope you've learned a lesson, Corporal," said Captain Freeman sadly.
"You're one of five wounded in to-night's performance, and two of our finest men are dead."