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One of the others heard me, however, and just as I reached the head of the stairs he came out to listen.
"I'm sure I heard something. They must have come. Should we go down? I am afraid of Ga.s.sen's rashness."
"Oh, leave him to himself." This was from the man whom Ga.s.sen had called Schmidt and who had spoken so little; and at that his companion returned to the room.
I crept on down the stairs, pausing now and then in the half hope that Ga.s.sen would return, when I should have a double advantage in my attack--surprise and a greater height from which to strike.
But I reached the door leading to the water front before I saw him.
He was standing on the edge of the wharf, his figure silhouetted sharply against the sheen of the gliding river, shading his eyes as he looked anxiously up stream for some sign of those he was awaiting so impatiently.
I was on the point of making my rush for him, when he turned and looked straight in my direction. I thought he saw me and held my breath in expectation of his attack. But I had presence of mind enough to remain as still as a stone figure.
Then he turned away; and I concluded that I had been too deep in the shadow of the doorway for his eyes to pierce the darkness.
He moved off toward the end of the wharf, and then I saw him start and stare down intently at the river below.
He had discovered the boat which I had fastened there, and he stooped down to examine it closely. Intent upon this he did not hear my steps as I crossed toward him, and when he rose I was close to him and had him covered with my revolver.
His surprise was so complete that he all but staggered backwards into the river. "The Englishman!" he exclaimed with a foul oath, as his hand went to his pocket.
"You won't move," I said in a low tense tone.
He recovered his coolness on the instant. "You daren't fire here," said he.
"You'll see that, if you move."
"How did you get here?"
"Turn round with your back to me."
"What for? What do you want to do?"
"Do as I tell you. Quick."
For a moment he hesitated whether to try the risk of a fight for it; but with a shrug of the shoulders he obeyed.
"Now get down into that boat."
He paused again; and again obeyed.
"Throw those oars out here," I rapped out sternly.
I knew he had a revolver on him and watched him like a lynx. "Well, it's a fine night for the river," he said carelessly as he picked up one of the oars and tossed it on the wharf. I went a little nearer to the edge to watch him more closely as he picked up the other; not for a second suspecting his intention.
"Same place as the other?" he asked in the same indifferent tone.
"Don't fool with me," I cried.
But he did. Just as he seemed about to toss the oar to the side of the other, he swung it round and thrust it violently into the pit of my stomach.
A fool in my unpreparedness I staggered, my pistol dropped from my hand, and the next instant he was back on the wharf with his hand at my throat.
CHAPTER XXIV
FROM PERIL TO PERIL
Ga.s.sen was a very heavily built man as well as much more muscular than I; and I should not have had one chance in ten against him in a struggle, even had the conditions been equal.
But they were anything but equal. I had allowed myself to be caught at such a disadvantage that the fight was as good as finished even before it had begun. At the mere force of his rush upon me I went down like a throttled puppy, choking vainly for breath as his fingers played a lively tune on my windpipe.
I knew that he meant to have my life; and I have never been so near death as when I lay staring helplessly up into his eyes, ablaze with the joy of victory and drunk with the l.u.s.t for vengeance.
My first effort was a desperate attempt to drag his hands from my throat; but although I put out all my strength and squirmed and wriggled and twisted to elude his grip, I could do nothing. His arms were twice as thick as mine and quite as hard; and to stop the twistings of my body he knelt on me, pressing his knees into my ribs and stomach until I thought the bones would crack.
I made frantic struggles for breath under the grim iron ruthless grip of his steely hands; and as I felt the blood congesting in my brain and the deadening sense of suffocation growing, I abandoned all hope and had no longer power to offer resistance.
But even at that instant the luck turned. I was throwing out my hands wildly in vague convulsive movements when my left hand struck against my revolver.
On the instant hope and the love of life revived.
To distract his attention I recommenced to struggle, using my right hand only; and just as he was lifting me up to dash my head against the ground and finish the thing, I fired and shot him in the head.
Death was instantaneous, I think. His grip relaxed and he was falling forward on top of me when I had just sufficient strength left to push him to one side.
I lay still for some moments, incapable of movement, while the effects of the struggle and my terrible fight for breath continued. And at length I sat up, dazed, dizzy and bewildered, until the instinct of self-preservation roused me to effort.
I scrambled to my feet and stood, staggering and shaking like a drunken man, as I looked down at the still body and wondered in a vague dreamy way what I had better do with it. I was in very truth drunk with the peril through which I had pa.s.sed and with the relief of my unexpected escape from death.
Then I remembered the men in the room above and wondered if they had heard the shot fired, and what they would do in consequence. I had still the work to do which had brought me to the place. For Althea's sake I must go through with it; and the thought of her put fresh strength into me.
My antagonist was lying close to the edge of the water; and this started an idea. I staggered along to the end of the landing stage, unfastened the boat, and dragged it close to where he lay. Then, having taken the precaution to exchange revolvers, that he might appear to have killed himself, I bundled him into the boat, and thrust it out for the stream to carry him where it would.
All the time I had been wondering dimly why the men above had not come out to learn the reason of the shot; and now I began to wish they would come. I was recovering mastery of both wits and muscles; and perceived that if they would but help me by coming down, I could easily drive them into the river at the point of the revolver, to swim for their lives.
In this hope I waited for what seemed a long time. But either they had not heard the shot or were afraid to venture down.
When they did not come, there was nothing for it but for me to go up again to them. Now that the one desperate man, Ga.s.sen, was dead, I feared them no longer. The one man's persistent urging of caution and the other's fear of Ga.s.sen led me to believe that they were of the order of men who can plan trouble for others to do but don't care to take a hand in carrying it out.
As they would probably conclude that any noise I made was caused by Ga.s.sen returning there was no need for any particular caution; so I ran up the stairs and crossed to the room with a firm tread.
"Was that a shot just now, Ga.s.sen?" asked the elder man. "You weren't fool enough to fire at this time of night outside?"
He had barely finished the question when I entered the room, bringing them both to their feet with a cry of surprise.