THE TEN CROSSES. Ogier del' Peyra, with a much larger body of men, murderously, if not well, equipped, had left Ste. Soure an hour after the departure of Jean. The VÉzÈre makes a great sweep to meet the Beune, but, as though disgusted at the insignificance of its tributary, after having received its waters, it at once turns and flows in an almost directly opposite direction, leaving a broad, flat tongue of land round which it curls, a tongue of rich alluvial soil, interspersed with gravel that is purple in autumn with crocus, and in summer blue with salvia. Here the party, headed by Ogier, waited in patience till the signal flashed thrice from the heights opposite, when it was immediately answered by three corresponding flares of dry grass. Then Ogier and his men, under cover of the darkness, moved up the river to the ford, waded across the water, and cautiously crept along the river bank among the osiers in straggling line, till they had Then they sat down in the dewy grass and waited. Hour passed after hour. The stars before them waxed faint and went out. Then, suddenly, bringing all to their feet, came the peal of the horn, echoed and re-echoed from every cliff, and followed by a crash and a flare. The scene that ensued was one such as none who witnessed it had ever had a chance of beholding before, or were likely to see again. The immense pile of brushwood and fat and other fuel caught with rapidity and rose in a burst of flame high up, as it were in mid-heaven, followed immediately by its being poured over the lip of the precipice, the molten, blazing tar, the incandescent fat, streaked the cliff as with rivers of light, fell on the projecting roof, ran in through the interstices created by the fall of stones that had shivered the covering tiles, and set fire to the rafters they had protected. Dense volumes of swirling red smoke, in which danced ghostly jets of blue flame, rolled about the habitation of the robber band, and penetrated to its interior. It broke out of the windows in long spirals and tongues, forked as those of adders. "Forward!" yelled Ogier, and the whole party rushed up the steep ascent. For one reason it would have been better had they crept up the steep slope before the horn was blown, so as to be ready at once to burst the gates and occupy every avenue. But Ogier had considered this course, and had deemed the risk greater than the advantage. To climb the rubble slope without displacing the shale was impossible; to do so without making sufficient noise to alarm the sentinel was hardly feasible in such a still night. This might have been done in blustering wind and lashing rain, not on such a night as that when the bullfrog's call rang down the valley and was answered by another frog a mile distant. The ascent was arduous; it could not have been made easily in pitch darkness; now it was effected rapidly by the glare of the cataract of falling fire and of blazing rafters. In ten minutes, with faces streaming, with lungs blowing, the peasants reached the gate-house. They beat at it with stones, with their fists; they drove their pikes at it, but could not open it. "I have not been in there for nothing," laughed he. "I saw what they had for climbing walls, and I've made the like at my forge." Then he went to the wall, drove in the end of his pick, and in a moment, like a cat, went up from stone course to stone course, till he reached the summit of the wall, when he threw aside his foot-grapnels and leaped within. In the panic caused by the sudden avalanche of stones and fire the sentinel had deserted the gate. The oak doors were cast open, and the whole body of armed men burst in. They found the small garrison huddled together, paralysed with fear, all their daring, their insolence, their readiness on an occasion gone. They stood like sheep, unable to defend themselves, and were taken without offering any resistance. The surprise was so complete, the awfulness of the manner in which they were visited was so overwhelming, that the ruffians did not know whether they were not called to their final account, and whether their assailants were not fiends from the flaming abyss. It had come on them in the midst of sleep when stupefied with drink. "Bring the prisoners to me," said Ogier. "Where is the Captain? Where is Le Gros Guillem?" The head of the band was not taken. "Disperse—seek him everywhere!" ordered Del' Peyra. The men ran in every possible direction. They searched every cranny. "He has escaped up the ladder to the Last Refuge!" shouted one. The Last Refuge was the chamber excavated above the projecting roof of the castle, cut in the solid rock. "He cannot," said another, "the ladder was the first thing to burn. See, it is in pieces now." "If he be there," scoffed a third, "let him there abide. He can neither get up nor down." "I do not think he is there. He is in Hell's Mouth." This Hell's Mouth was the tortuous cavern opening upon the ledge of rock occupied by the castle. "If he is there, who will follow him?" asked one. "Aye! who—when the foul fiend will hide him." "I do not believe it," said one of the men who had A mal-pas, in fact, exists in many of these rock castles. It consists of a track sometimes natural, often artificially cut in the face of the cliff, so narrow that only a man with an unusually steady head can tread it; often is the mal-pas so formed that it cannot be walked along upright, but in a bent posture. Often also it is cut through abruptly and purposely to be crossed by a board which he who has fled over it can kick down and so intercept pursuit. "Bring up the men for me to judge them," said Ogier, "and you, Mathieu, give me your sharp-pointed pick." The man addressed handed the implement to his Seigneur, who seated himself on the floor of rock with his legs apart and extended. "Giraud!" said Ogier, "and you, Roland, run out a beam through one of the windows—through yonder, and one of you find rope—abundance. How many are here?" "There are twelve," was the answer. "That is well; twelve—enough rope to hang twelve men, one after another from the window." Sufficiency of rope was not to be found. "It matters not," said Ogier. "There are other ways into another world than along a rope. They "Which end?" "This one in the room, to hold it down." A large beam, fallen from the roof in the adjoining chamber, and still smoking and glowing at one end, was dragged in, and the burning end thrust out through a window. The driving it through the opening, together with the inrush of air to the heated apartments, caused the red and charred wood to burst into light; it projected some ten feet beyond the wall, fizzing, spurting forth jets of blue flame over the abyss. "Number one!" shouted Ogier. "Make him walk the rafter. Drive him forward with your pikes if he shrinks back." One of the ruffians of the band, his face as parchment, speechless in the stupefaction of his fear, was made to mount the beam, and then the peasants round shouted, drove at him with their knives and pruning-hooks, and made him pass through the window. There were three men seated on the end of the beam, which rested on a bench in the chamber. The moment the unhappy wretch had disappeared through the window, Ogier began to hew with his pick into the floor. "Forward! He is hanging back! He clings to the wall! Coward! He is endeavouring to scramble "Drive him off with a pike! Make him dance on the embers!" called one within, and a reaping-hook, bound to a pole, was thrust forth. A scream, horrible in its agony, in its intensity; and those seated on the beam felt there was no longer a counterpoise. Chip, chip, went Ogier. Presently he looked up. He had cut a Greek cross in the chalk floor. "Number two!" he ordered. Then the wretch who was seized burst from his captors, rushed up to Ogier, threw himself on his knees, and implored to be spared. He would do anything. He would forswear the English. He would never plunder again. Old Del' Peyra looked at him coldly. "Did you ever spare one who fell into your hands? Did you spare Rossignol? Make him walk the beam." The shrieking wretch was lifted by strong arms on to the rafter; he refused to stand, he threw himself on his knees, he struggled, bit, prayed, sobbed—all the manhood was gone out of him. "Thrust him through the window," said one. "If he will not walk the beam he shall cling to it." "Cut off his fingers," said one. Then the man, to escape a blow from an axe, ran his hands along, put them on glowing red charcoal, and dropped. Chip, chip! went Ogier. He had cut a second cross. "Number three!" he said. The man whose turn came thrust aside those who held him, leaped on the beam, and walked deliberately through the window and bounded into the darkness. Chip, chip! went Ogier. He worked on till he had incised a third cross in the floor. Thus one by one was sent to his death out of the chamber reeking with wood-smoke, illumined by the puffs of flame from the still burning buildings that adjoined. Ten crosses had been cut in the floor. "Number eleven!" said Ogier; and at that same moment his son Jean entered at the head of those who had ignited and sent down the cataract of fire that had consumed the nest. "What are you doing, father?" "Sending them before their Judge," answered Ogier. "See these ten crosses. There are ten have been dismissed." "I do not cry for life; but this I say; it was I, aye, I and my fellow here, Amanieu, who provided the hundred livres, without which the seven would not have been set free." "You provided it?" "Aye, under the Captain's daughter. It was we who did it. If that goes to abate our sentence—well." "Father, spare these two," pleaded Jean. "As you will, Jean; but there is space for two more crosses. Would—would I could cut an eleventh, and that a big one, for the Gros Guillem." Then murmurs arose. The peasants, their love of revenge, their lust for slaughter whetted, clamoured for the death of the last two of the band. But Jean was firm. "My father surrenders them to me," he said. "Then let them run on the mal-pas," shouted one of the peasants. "Good!" said the brigand Roger; "give me a plank and I will run on it, so will Amanieu." Ogier looked ruefully at the crosses. "'Tis a pity," said he. "I intended to cut a dozen." If the visitor to the Eglise de Guillem will look, to this day, rudely hacked in the floor, he will see the ten crosses: he will see further—but we will leave the rest to the sequel. |