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"I will try mine," said Paston.
But before he could draw the triggers, the pistols were wrested from his grasp by the two attendants, who had quitted Thorneycroft, and stolen upon him unperceived, and who next pinioned his arms.
CHAPTER IV
THE PIT
So bewildered was the poor iron-merchant by the strange and terrible events that had befallen him, that, though released by the two masked attendants, who left him, as before related, to seize Gerard Paston, he felt utterly incapable of exertion, and would probably have made no effort to regain his freedom, if his coat had not been vigorously plucked behind, while a low voice urged him to fly. Glancing in the direction of the friendly speaker, he could just discern a diminutive object standing within the entrance of a side-pa.s.sage, and reared up against the wall so as to be out of sight of Rougemont and his attendants. It was the monkey--or rather Old Parr--who, continuing to tug violently at his coat, at last succeeded in drawing him backwards into the pa.s.sage, and then grasping his hand tightly, hurried him along it. The pa.s.sage was wholly unlighted, but Mr. Thorneycroft could perceive that it was exceedingly circuitous, and winded round like a maze.
"Where are you taking me?" he inquired, attempting to stop.
"Ask no questions," rejoined the dwarf, pulling him along. "Do you want to be captured, and shut up in a cell for the rest of your life?"
"Certainly not," replied Thorneycroft, accelerating his movements; "I hope there's no chance of it."
"There's every chance of it," rejoined Old Parr. "If you're taken, you'll share Auriol's fate."
"O Lord! I hope not," groaned the iron-merchant. "I declare, you frighten me so much that you take away all power of movement. I shall drop in a minute."
"Come along, I say," screamed the dwarf. "I hear them close behind us."
And as he spoke, shouts, and the noise of rapidly-approaching footsteps, resounded along the pa.s.sage.
"I can't stir another step," gasped the iron-merchant. "I'm completely done. Better yield at once."
"What, without a struggle?" cried the dwarf tauntingly. "Think of your daughter, and let the thought of her nerve your heart. She is lost for ever, if you don't get out of this accursed place."
"She is lost for ever as it is," cried the iron-merchant despairingly.
"No--she may yet be saved," rejoined the dwarf. "Come on--come on--they are close behind us."
And it was evident, from the increased clamour, that their pursuers were upon them.
Roused by the imminence of the danger, and by the hope of rescuing his daughter, Mr. Thorneycroft exerted all his energies, and sprang forward.
A little farther on, they were stopped by a door. It was closed; and venting his disappointment in a scream, the dwarf searched for the handle, but could not find it.
"We are entrapped--we shall be caught," he cried, "and then woe to both of us. Fool that I was to attempt your preservation. Better I had left you to rot in a dungeon than have incurred Rougemont's displeasure."
The iron-merchant replied by a groan.
"It's all over with me," he said. "I give it up--I'll die here!"
"No--we are saved," cried the dwarf, as the light, now flas.h.i.+ng strongly upon the door, revealed a small iron b.u.t.ton within it,--"saved--saved!"
As he spoke, he pressed against the b.u.t.ton, which moved a spring, and the door flew open. Just as they pa.s.sed through it, the two masked attendants came in sight. The dwarf instantly shut the door, and finding a bolt on the side next him, shot it into the socket. Scarcely had he accomplished this, when the pursuers came up, and dashed themselves against the door; but finding it bolted, presently ceased their efforts, and apparently withdrew.
"They are gone by some other way to intercept us," cried Old Parr, who had paused for a moment to listen; "come on, Mr. Thorneycroft."
"I'll try," replied the iron-merchant, with a subdued groan, "but I'm completely spent. Oh that I ever ventured into this place!"
"It's too late to think of that now; besides, you came here to rescue your daughter," rejoined Old Parr. "Take care and keep near me. I wonder where this pa.s.sage leads to?"
"Don't you know?" inquired the iron-merchant.
"Not in the least," returned the dwarf. "This is the first time I've been here--and it shall be the last, if I'm allowed any choice in the matter."
"You haven't told me how you came here at all," observed Thorneycroft.
"I hardly know myself," replied the dwarf; "but I find it more difficult to get out than I did to get in. How this pa.s.sage twists about! I declare we seem to be returning to the point we started from."
"I think we are turning round ourselves," cried Thorneycroft, in an agony of fright. "My head is going. Oh dear! oh dear!"
"Why, it does seem very strange, I must say," remarked the dwarf, coming to a halt. "I could almost fancy that the solid stone walls were moving around us."
"They _are_ moving," cried Thorneycroft, stretching out his hand. "I feel 'em. Lord have mercy upon us, and deliver us from the power of the Evil One!"
"The place seems on fire," cried the dwarf. "A thick smoke fills the pa.s.sage. Don't you perceive it, Mr. Thorneycroft?"
"Don't I!--to be sure I do," cried the iron-merchant, coughing and sneezing. "I feel as if I were in a room with a smoky chimney, and no window open. Oh!--oh!--I'm choking!"
"Don't mind it," cried the dwarf, who seemed quite at his ease. "We shall soon be out of the smoke."
"I can't stand it," cried Mr. Thorneycroft; "I shall die. Oh!
poah--pish--puff!"
"Come on, I tell you--you'll get some fresh air in a minute," rejoined Old Parr. "Halloa! how's this? No outlet. We're come to a dead stop."
"Dead stop, indeed!" echoed the iron-merchant. "We've come to that long ago. But what new difficulty has arisen?"
"Merely that the road's blocked up by a solid wall--that's all," replied Old Parr.
"Blocked up!" exclaimed Thorneycroft. "Then we're entombed alive."
"_I_ am," said the dwarf, with affected nonchalance. "As to you, you've the comfort of knowing it'll soon be over with you. But for me, nothing can harm me."
"Don't be too sure of that," cried a voice above them.
"Did you speak, Mr. Thorneycroft?" asked the dwarf.
"N-o-o--not I," gasped the iron-merchant. "I'm suffocating--help to drag me out."
"Get out if you can," cried the voice that had just spoken.
"It's Rougemont himself," cried the dwarf in alarm. "Then there's no escape."