Part 28 (1/2)
”Because the guns are red-hot from incessant firing.”
”Then throw water upon them!” cried Ali, and with that he dismounted from his horse.
Caretto, for the life of him, could not help laughing at this senseless command. Whereupon Tepelenti suddenly leaped upon him and struck him in the face, so that his cap flew far away, right off the bastion. He had struck Caretto on the very spot where Kurs.h.i.+d Pasha's grenade had lacerated his face a few weeks before.
The Italian readjusted over his eye the bandage, which had been knocked all awry by the blow, and observed, with a cold affectation of mirth:
”You did well, sir, to strike my face on the spot where one eye had been knocked out already, for if you had struck me on the other side you might have knocked out the other eye also, and then how could I have pointed your guns?”
Ali, however, pretended to take no notice, but directed that the guns should be douched with cold water and then reloaded; he himself fired the first. The cannon the same instant burst in two and smashed the leg of a cannonier standing close to it.
”It does not matter,” cried Ali; ”load the others, too.”
When the second cannon also burst he dashed the match to the ground, threw himself on his horse, and galloped off, quivering in every nerve as if shaken by an ague.
The Italian, however, with the utmost _sang-froid_, ordered that the exploded cannons should be removed and fresh ones fetched from the a.r.s.enal and put in their places, and set them in position amidst a shower of bullets from the besiegers. When the battery was ready the enemy withdrew their siege guns, and till the next day not another shot was fired against Janina.
Tepelenti was well aware that he had mortally offended Caretto, and he had learned to know men (especially Italians) only too well to imagine for an instant that Caretto, for all his jocoseness on the occasion, would ever forget that cowardly and ungrateful blow. For, indeed, it was an act of the vilest ingrat.i.tude. What! to strike the wound which the man had received on his account! To strike a European officer in the face! Ali was well aware that such a thing could never be pardoned.
The same night he sent for two gunners and ordered them not to lose sight of Caretto for an instant, and if he attempted to escape to shoot him down there and then.
Next day Caretto was unusually good-humored. Early in the morning he went out upon the ramparts, which were then covered with freshly fallen snow. The winter seemed to be pouring forth its last venom, and the large flakes fell so thickly that one could not see twenty paces in advance.
”This is just the weather for an a.s.sault,” said Caretto in a loud voice to the Turks standing around him; ”in such wild weather one cannot see the enemy till he stands beneath the very ramparts. I will be so bold as to maintain that Kurs.h.i.+d's bands are likely to steal upon us under cover of this thick snow-storm. I should like to fire a random shot from the ramparts to let them know we are awake.”
Many thought his anxiety just. Ali Pasha was also there, and he said nothing either for or against the proposal.
Caretto hoisted a cannon to the level of the ramparts of Lithanizza and fastened a long chain to the gun whereby his group of Albanians could raise and lower it.
”Leave the chain upon it,” said Caretto, ”for we may have to turn it in another direction.”
Nevertheless it was in a good position already. Caretto calculated his distances with his astrolabe, then pointed the gun and ordered it to be loaded.
The two gunners whom Ali had set to watch him never took their eyes off the Italian; both of them had loaded pistols in their hands.
Caretto did not seem to observe that they were watching him; he might have thought that they were there to help him.
The gun had to be turned now to the right and now to the left.
Caretto himself took aim, but the clumsy Albanians kept on pus.h.i.+ng the heavy laffette either a little too much on this side or a little too much on that, till at last he cried to the two watchers behind him:
”Just lend a hand and help these blockheads!” They stooped mechanically to raise the laffette. ”Enough!” cried the Italian, and with that he put his hand on the touch-hole. ”Now fire!” he cried to the artilleryman, at the same time removing his hand.
The match descended, there was a thunderous report, and the same instant Caretto seized the chain wound round the wheel of the cannon, and, lowering himself from the ramparts, glided down the chain.
The watchers, with the double velocity of rage and fear, rushed to the breastwork of the ramparts. Caretto had got to the end of the chain and was grasping it with both hands; below him yawned a depth of thirty feet. The chain was not long enough, and there he was suspended between two deaths.
”Come back,” cried the watchers, aiming their pistols at his head, ”or we will shoot you through and through!”
Caretto cast a wild glance upward, the bandage fell from his b.l.o.o.d.y eye, and he looked at them with the dying fury of a desperately wounded wild beast. Then suddenly he kicked himself clear of the wall by a sharp movement of his foot, and describing the arc of a circle, he plunged into the depth beneath him like a rebounding bullet. The Albanians fired after him, but neither of them hit him. Below, at the foot of the bastion, the daring Italian lay motionless for a moment, but then he quickly rose to his feet and began to clamber up the other side of the ditch. He could only make use of one arm, for the other had been dislocated in his fall. Straining all his might, he struggled up; a whole shower of bullets pursued him and whistled about his head, but not one of them hit him, for the heavy snowfall made it difficult to take aim. At last he reached the top of the opposite side of the trench, and then he turned round and shook his fist at the devastating fortress, and disappeared in a heavy snow-drift. The gunners kept on firing after him at random for some time.