Part 4 (1/2)

Then, quickly re-forming them, he gave the word, ”By the left!

Quick march!” and the Die-hards swung steadily up the hill towards the platform where the four nine-pounders grinned defiance to the s.h.i.+ps of France.

As a matter of fact, this battery stood out of reach of harm, with the compensating disadvantage of being able to inflict none.

The reef below would infallibly wreck any s.h.i.+p that tried to approach within the point-blank range of some 270 yards, and its extreme range of ten times that distance was no protection to the haven, which lay round a sharp corner of the cliff. But the engineer's blunder was never a check upon the alacrity of the Die-hards, who cleaned, loaded, rammed home, primed, sighted, and blazed away with the precision of clockwork and the ardour of Britons, as though aware that the true strength of a nation lay not so much in the construction of her fortresses as in the spirit of her sons.

Captain Pond halted, re-formed his men upon the platform, and, drawing a key from his pocket, ordered Lieutenant Clogg to the store-hut, with Uncle Issy in attendance, to serve our the ammunition, rammers, sponges, water-buckets, etc.

”But the door's unlocked, sir,” announced the lieutenant, with something like dismay.

”Unlocked!” echoed the Doctor.

The Captain blushed.

”I could have sworn, Doctor, I turned the key in the lock before leaving last Thursday. I think my head must be going. I've been sleeping badly of late--it's this worry about Fugler. However, I don't suppose anybody--”

A yell interrupted him. It came from Uncle Issy, who had entered the store-hut, and now emerged from it as if projected from a gun.

”THE FRENCH! THE FRENCH!”

For two terrible seconds the Die-hards eyed one another.

Then someone in the rear rank whispered, ”An ambus.h.!.+” The two ranks began to waver--to melt. Uncle Issy, with head down and shoulders arched, was already stumbling down the slope towards the town.

In another ten seconds the whole Company would be at his heels.

The Doctor saved their reputation. He was as pale as the rest; but a hasty remembrance of the cubic capacity of the store-hut told him that the number of Frenchmen in ambush there could hardly be more than half a dozen.

”Halt!” he shouted; and Captain Pond shouted ”Halt!” too, adding, ”There'll be heaps of time to run when we find out what's the matter.”

The Die-hards hung, still wavering, upon the edge of the platform.

”For my part,” the Doctor declared, ”I don't believe there's anybody inside.”

”But there _is_, Doctor! for I saw him myself just as Uncle Issy called out,” said the second lieutenant.

”Was it only _one_ man that you saw?” demanded Captain Pond.

”That's all. You see, it was this way: Uncle Issy stepped fore, with me a couple of paces behind him thinking of nothing so little as bloodshed and danger. If you'll believe me, these things was the very last in my thoughts. Uncle Issy rolls aside the powder-cask, and what do I behold but a man ducking down behind it! 'He's firing the powder,' thinks I, 'and here endeth William George Clogg!'

So I shut my eyes, not willing to see my gay life whisked away in little portions; though I feared it must come. And then I felt Uncle Issy flee past me like the wind. But I kept my eyes tight till I heard the Doctor here saying there wasn't anybody inside. If you ask me what I think about the whole matter, I say, putting one thing with another, that 'tis most likely some poor chap taking shelter from the rain.”

Captain Pond unsheathed his sword and advanced to the door of the hut. ”Whoever you be,” he called aloud and firmly, ”you've got no business there; so come out of it, in the name of King George!”

At once there appeared in the doorway a little round-headed man in tattered and mud-soiled garments of blue cloth. His hair and beard were alike short, black, and stubbly; his eyes large and feverish, his features smeared with powder and a trifle pinched and pale.

In his left hand he carried a small bundle, wrapped in a knotted blue kerchief: his right he waved submissively towards Captain Pond.

”See now,” he began, ”I give up. I am taken. Look you.”

”I think you must be a Frenchman,” said Captain Pond.

”Right. It is war: you have taken a Frenchman. Yes?”

”A spy?” the Captain demanded more severely.