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The staff followed, conspicuous in short green attilas, with heavy gold tr.i.m.m.i.n.gs, and with herons' plumes in their hats.
The Russian leader, similarly accompanied, advanced from his lines, and we watched the two generals exchange hand-clasps.
I sat my horse and gazed spellbound while they talked, pitying the chivalrous Gorgei from my heart.
Meanwhile, the Hungarian troops were still marching to their appointed places, while the Russian army stood in two long lines on the plain of Vilagos.
The conference between the leaders ceased; they returned to their posts, and we waited impatiently for the end.
At length all was ready. The Magyars were drawn up in two lines opposite their Muscovite foes--the infantry in the first, with the cavalry on the wings; the artillery in the second.
Once again Gorgei and his staff rode to the front, where the Russian generals met them.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "_Gorgei and his staff rode to the front, where the Russian generals met them._" Page 338]]
The two leaders saluted, and then along the whole line sounded the beating of drums.
My eyes ached, my brain grew dizzy, my heart throbbed violently as I strained forward, eagerly watching.
That rolling of drums was the death-knell of all our hopes.
At its signal the Russians presented arms, proudly but not vaingloriously, and then--
There was a low wail, a cry of despair from the spectators, an outburst of grief such as I had never heard, shall never hear again.
Strong men shook with grief, women sobbed as if their hearts were broken, as our gallant infantry laid their useless weapons on the ground, the cavalry on their saddles.
As for me, I crouched low, hiding my face in my horse's mane.
I have known much of happiness since then, but no joy has ever effaced the impression made on that sorrowful day.
Even now, as I sit dreaming many years after the event, the picture rises before me fresh as ever.
With eyes open or shut, I see as in reality the pyramids of muskets; the cannon drawn close together, and without gunners; the dismounted cavalry, with their swords on the pommels of their saddles; the loved flags and standards, that had fluttered so proudly on many battlefields, lying in the dust.
I see the glorious red, white, and green stripes dirty and in rags, and think of the one that wraps all that remains of my gallant brother. I see the thousands of brave men who have fought and bled for Hungary, now disarmed and impotent, but still undaunted even in that hour of bitterness.
Then again the rolling of drums pierces my ears, and I see the breaking of the ranks as the men, under strong escorts, are marched off to their various destinations.
I hear, too, the first whisper, which afterwards swelled into a loud roar, that Gorgei is a traitor, and has sold his country to the Russians. My ears burn like fire, and I blush for my countrymen.
It is not given to us to probe the secrets of the human heart, and I was absent from my general in the latter days; but I had marched with him, toiled with him, fought at his side, seen him go again and again to almost certain death, in order to rally his failing soldiers, and I judge a man by his actions.
But my dreams run away with me. I must return to that sorrowful evening of August 13, when Mecsey, plucking at my sleeve, brought me back to real life.
"It's all over," he said brusquely; "and now that the prey is secured, the Austrian jackal will come to pick the bones."
"The Austrians will not dare," I began; but he stopped me with a mirthless laugh.
"Gorgei has saved the army at the expense of the officers," he said.
"There will be a fine feast of death before long."
These words added to my misery, for I thought of my light-hearted friend Rakoczy, and wondered if he would be counted amongst the victims.
I expressed my fears to Mecsey, who promptly proposed that we should discover where the colonel had been taken.
This, however, was more easily said than done, as we soon found.
Russian troops in charge of their prisoners were marching in all directions, and it was impossible to scan them all.
We went about hither and thither, asking questions of the crowd to little purpose; but at length we had the good fortune to meet with a number of soldiers belonging to the 9th Honveds, who had slipped from the ranks at the very moment of surrender.
They were all looking miserable and dejected; but one, catching sight of me, ran up eagerly.
"From the colonel, sir," he cried joyfully; "though neither of us ever expected I should have the luck to meet you."
He took a folded paper from his pocket, and I pounced on it quickly.
Here, no doubt, was the very information we sought; but in this I was disappointed.
The dear, unselfish fellow, indifferent to his own fate, had used the last moments of his freedom to send me a warning.
"Look out for yourself," the note ran; "your name alone will get you into trouble. Give Gyula [that was my home] a wide berth till the wolves are gorged.--J.R."
Not a word either of hope or fear for himself; all his cares were for me.
That was just like "John the Joyous," and my eyes were dim as I placed the paper in my pocket.
The faded characters, barely legible now, meet my eyes as I write; for that sc.r.a.p of soiled paper remains one of my most sacred treasures, and it lies in a little golden casket on my desk.
"Have you found him, captain?"
The speaker was Mecsey, and when I shook my head sadly he immediately began to question the soldiers.
Here, again, we were at fault. No one really knew where the colonel was, some a.s.serting he had been taken to Gros-Wardein with Gorgei, others saying he had gone south with his regiment to Nagy Kikinda.
We spent another hour in questioning various men who had escaped from Vilagos, but could gain no news of the colonel, though several stated positively that the 9th Honveds had marched southward under a strong escort.
Then I held council with Mecsey, and we decided to separate, he to reconnoitre Gros-Wardein, while I followed my old regiment. At the end of a week we were to meet again at Arad, by which time it was likely that one of us would have discovered my missing friend.
"Good-bye, captain," said Mecsey, grasping the hand I held out to him, "and take the colonel's advice. It's easier to get into an Austrian prison than out of one."
"All right, my trusty fellow; I shall keep my eyes open, though I'm not tall enough for the Austrians to cut down."
So we parted, guessing little of the events which would happen before we met again.
Night was fast closing in by now, and in the darkness I missed the bridge over the Maros River, which made me lose nearly two hours, and prevented me from striking the trail of the 9th Honveds.
However, I found the bridge at last, and, crossing to the other side, pursued my way at hap-hazard as long as my horse could keep going; then I sat down by the roadside and waited for the morning.