Volume III Part 32 (1/2)

The recital of Pique-Vinaigre was interrupted.

”Roussel, ahoy!” cried a voice from without; ”come then, and eat your soup; four o'clock will strike in ten minutes.”

”All right! the story is about finished. I'll go. Thank you, my boy, you have amused me finely; you may be proud of it,” said the keeper to Pique-Vinaigre, going toward the door. Then, stopping, ”Be good boys!” he added, to the prisoners, turning around.

”We are going to hear the end of the story,” said Skeleton, almost bursting with restrained rage. Then he whispered to the Big Cripple, ”Go to the door, look after the keeper, and when you have seen him go out of the court, cry 'Gargousse!' and the spy is dead.”

”Just so,” said the Cripple, who accompanied the keeper, and remained standing near the door, watching him.

”I told you, then,” said Pique-Vinaigre, ”that Gringalet, all the time of his triumph, said to himself, 'Little gnat, I have---'”

”Gargousse!” cried the cripple.

”Mine! Gringalet, I will be your spider!” shouted Skeleton, throwing himself on Germain so that he could neither make a movement nor utter a cry. His voice died under the formidable grasp of the long iron fingers.

CHAPTER XI.

AN UNEXPECTED FRIEND.

”If you are the spider, I will be the golden gnat, Skeleton of evil!” cried a voice, at the moment when Germain, surprised by the violence and sudden attack of his implacable enemy, fell backward on his bench, at the mercy of the ruffian, who, with one knee on his breast, held him by the throat.

”Yes, I will be the gnat, and, what is more, a famous gnat!” repeated the man in the blue cap, of whom we have spoken; then, with a furious bound, overturning three or four prisoners who separated him from Germain, he sprung upon Skeleton, and struck him on his head, between the eyes, such a torrent of blows with his fists that the sound was like a hammer upon an anvil.

The man in the blue cap (who was no other than the Chourineur) added, as he redoubled the rapidity of his hammering on the head of the Skeleton, ”It is the hail-storm of fisticuffs which M. Rudolph planted on my skull. I have learned the trick.”

At this unexpected a.s.sault, the prisoners were struck with surprise, taking no part for or against the Chourineur. Many of them, still under the salutary impression of the story of Pique-Vinaigre, were even satisfied at this incident, which might save Germain. Skeleton, at first stunned, staggered like an ox under the butcher's ax, extended his hand mechanically to ward off the blows of his enemy. Germain was enabled to disengage himself from the mortal grip, and half arose.

”But what is all this? who is this bruiser?” cried the Cripple; and springing upon the Chourineur, he tried to seize his arms from behind, while the latter endeavored to hold down Skeleton on the bench.

The defender of Germain answered the attack by a kick so violent, that he sent the Cripple rolling to the extremity of the circle formed by the prisoners. Germain, of a livid paleness, half suffocated, kneeling beside the bench, did not appear to have any consciousness of what was pa.s.sing around him. The strangulation had been so violent and painful he hardly breathed. After he had recovered a little, Skeleton, by a desperate effort, succeeded in shaking off the Chourineur, and getting upon his feet.

Panting, drunk with rage and hatred, he was frightful. His cadaverous face streamed with blood, his upper lip, drawn back like a mad wolfs, displayed his teeth closely set against each other. At length he cried, in a voice breathless with anger and fatigue, for his struggle with the Chourineur had been violent, ”Cut him down, the turncoat, cowards! who let me be attacked traitorously, or the spy will escape.”

During this kind of truce, the Chourineur, raising up the half-fainting Germain, had skillfully managed to approach by degrees an angle of the wall, where he placed him. Profiting by this excellent position of defense, the Chourineur could then, without fear of being attacked from behind, hold out a long time against the prisoners, on whom the courage and Herculean strength which he had just displayed made a powerful impression.

Pique-Vinaigre, alarmed, had disappeared during the tumult, without any one remarking his absence.

Seeing the hesitation of the greater part of the prisoners, Skeleton said, ”Come on, then, let us do the job for both of them, the big 'un and the little spy.”

”Not too fast!” answered the Chourineur, preparing for the combat; ”look out for yourself, Bones! If you wish to play Cut-in-half, I will play Gargousse--I'll cut your weasand.”

”Why don't you jump on him?” cried the Cripple. ”Why does this madman defend the spy? Death to the spy, and him also! If he defends Germain, he is a traitor.”

”Yes! yes!”

”Death to the betrayers!”

”Death!”

”Yes; death to the traitor who defends him!”