Part 7 (1/2)
At last he determined upon the punishment or discomfiture of the shepherd boys. He roused his playmates to action; and one day they sallied forth in a body, to surprise and attack the shepherd boys. But there must have been a traitor in the camp of the town boys; for, when they reached the hill pastures, they not only found the shepherd boys prepared for them, but they found them arrayed in force. Before the town boys could rush to the attack, the shepherd boys, eager for the fray, ”took the initiative,” as the war records say, and making a dash upon the town boys, drove them ignominiously from the field.
Napoleon disliked a check. Discomfited and mortified, he turned on big Andrew Pozzo, the leader of the town boys.
”Why, you are no general!” he cried. ”You should have ma.s.sed us all together, and held up firm against the shepherds. But, instead, you scattered us all; and as for you--you ran faster than any of us!”
”Ho! little gamec.o.c.k! little boaster!” answered Pozzo hotly. ”You know it all, do you not? You'd better try it yourself, Captain Down-at-the-heel.”
”And I will, then!” cried Napoleon. ”Come, boys, try it again! Shall we be whipped by a lot of shepherd boys, garlic lovers, eaters of chestnut bread? Never! Follow me!” But the town boys had received all they wished, for one day. Only a portion of them followed Napoleon's lead; and they turned about and fled before they even met the shepherd boys, so formidable seemed the array of those warriors of the hills.
”Why, this will never do!” Napoleon exclaimed. ”It must not be said that we town boys have been whipped into slavery by these miserable ones of the mountains. At them again! What! You will not? Then let us arrange a careful plan of attack, and try them another day. Will you do so?”
The boys promised; for it is always easy to agree to do a thing at some later day. But Napoleon did not intend that the matter should be given up or postponed. He went to his grotto, and carefully thought out a plan of campaign.
The next day he gathered his forces about him, and endeavored to fire their hearts by a little theatrical effect.
”What say you, boys, to a cartel?” he said.
”A cartel?”
”Yes; a challenge to those miserable ones of the hill, daring them to battle.”
”But those hill dwellers cannot read; do you not know that, you silly?”
Andrew Pozzo cried. ”How, then, can you send a challenge?”
”How but by word of mouth?” replied Napoleon. ”See, here are Uncle Joey Fesch and big Ilari; they shall go with their sticks, and stand before those shepherd boys, and shall cry aloud”--
”Shall we, then?” broke in big Ilari. ”I will do no crying.”
Napoleon said nothing. He simply looked at the big fellow--looked at him--and went on as if there had been no interruption,--
”And shall cry aloud, 'Holo, miserable ones! holo, rascal shepherds! The town boys dare you to fight them. Are you cowards, or will you meet them in battle?' This shall Uncle Joey Fesch cry out. He has a mighty voice.”
”And of course they will fight,” sneered Andrew Pozzo. ”Did you think they would not? But shall we?”
”Shall we not, then?” answered Napoleon. ”And if you will but follow and obey me, we will conquer those hill boys, as you never could if Pozzo led you on. For I will show you the trick of mastery. Of mastery, do you hear? And those miserable boys of the sheep pastures shall never more play the victor over us boys of the town.”
It was worth trying, and the boys of that day and time were accustomed to give and take hard knocks.
So Uncle Joey Fesch and big Tony Ilari, the bearers of the challenge, set off for the hill pastures; and while they were gone Napoleon directed the preparations of his forces.
The heralds returned with an answer of defiance from the hill boys.
”So! they boast, do they?” little Napoleon said. ”We will show them how skill is better than strength. Remember my orders: stones in your pockets, the stick in your hand. Attention! In order! March!”
In excellent order the little army set out for the hills. In the pastures where they had met defeat the day before they saw the straggling forces of the shepherd boys awaiting them.
”Halt!” commanded the Captain Napoleon.
”Let the challengers go forward again,” he directed. ”Summon them to surrender, and pa.s.s under the yoke. Tell them we will be masters in Ajaccio.”
The big boy challengers obeyed the little leader's command; and as they departed on their mission Napoleon ordered his soldiers to quietly drop the stones they carried in their pockets, in a line where they stood.