Jack Harkaway's Boy Tinker Among The Turks by Bracebridge Hemyng (books for men to read .txt) đź“•
"Stop," said the captain. "Have you any thing to take his excellency as a present?"
This made the orphan feel somewhat nervous.
It tended to confirm what young Jack had said.
"It is, then, the custom to make presents?" he said.
"Yes."
"What shall I give?"
"Any thing. That's a very nice watch you wear."
"Must I give that?"
"Yes. His excellency is sure to present you with a much richer one--that's Turkish etiquette."
This again corroborated Jack's words.
Yet it was a far more pleasant way of putting it than Jack had thought fit to do.
Mr. Figgins only objected to a present of wives.
Any thing rich in the way of jewellery was quite another matter.
"On entering the presence, you have only to prostrate yourself three times; the third time you work it so that you
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"Dear Thyra," cried Jack, "you shall not be taken. I will and must protect you."
He sprang up the stairway, and was soon on the roof.
It was a sight indeed to appal the stoutest heart.
As far as the eye could reach was an excited crowd, restless, furious, and thirsting for vengeance.
In the front were a body of troops, in Turkish uniform, led by the captain of the guard by whose side could be recognised the sinister countenance of Abdullah.
They caught sight of Jack Harkaway.
He was recognised.
A shout burst from a thousand throats; a deep, angry cry, like the roar of a tempestuous sea.
Thousands of eyes flashed upon him—the eyeballs gleaming white from out of the dusky skins.
"The murderer of the pasha—the despoiler of the harem!" they cried. "Death, death to him, and all the Christians!"
Jack endeavoured to parley with them; but it was useless, until silence was obtained by the commands of the captain of the guard and Abdullah, who called out to Jack—
"Resistance is useless; surrender at once, or I will not answer for your life."
"If you want me, you must come and fetch me," returned dauntless Jack.
"Your blood be upon your own head, then," said Abdullah.
The captain gave the word of command, and the battering, for a while suspended, was recommenced upon the door below.
CHAPTER LXXXIV.
THE SIEGE—THE ESCAPE—A DESPERATE RUSE.
Jack now left his dangerous elevation, and returned to his friends.
"Quite as bad as it can be," he said; "there's nothing for it but to make a desperate resistance, and to die game."
The yells and shouts of the crowd outside were like the combined roar of a large herd of wild beasts.
The blows became more furious on the door.
It quivered beneath the repeated shocks; but its own strength, and that of the fastenings, and particularly the barricade behind it, still defied the efforts of the besiegers.
Suddenly the hammering ceased, the yells of the crowd subsided.
Then came a volley of musketry.
They were firing at the door.
The volleys came thick and fast; the woodwork, strong as it was, began to be penetrated by the bullets.
It was clear the place would soon be untenable.
Should the besiegers enter, all hope of escape would be over.
"At least, we'll return their fire," said Jack.
The windows in the wall facing the street were mere loopholes.
At each of these, Jack commanded one of his men to take his stand, and pick off the enemy with the rifle.
It was a dangerous game, but it served its purpose.
Several of the besiegers fell before the well-aimed shots of the besieged.
The Turks began to think that they were being opposed by a considerable force of well armed men.
Their own shots failed to reach the highly-placed and narrow windows, which were now so many portholes for the fire of the besieged.
The captain and Abdullah accordingly ordered their troops to fall back.
The excited crowd gave a yell of disappointment.
"I do believe we've defeated them, after all," cried Harry Girdwood.
But it was only a lull in the storm—a fatal presage of overwhelming disaster.
The Turkish commanders now resolved to make certain of victory by bringing up a cannon.
If, by this means, their troops could once effect an entrance—and this was almost certain—what could stop their progress.
What were Harkaway's mere handful of men against the thousands they would have to encounter!
Once more, and at greater peril than ever, Jack went on the housetop to reconnoitre.
He laid himself down flat that he might not be seen, but yet contrived to take a rapid glance of the position.
The house was detached on three sides; the fourth side was built against the wall of a mosque.
Upon those three sides the building was entirely surrounded by troops.
The only chance of escape would be by the mosque.
But how was this to be effected?
The wall of the sacred building rose high above that of the house.
Jack raised himself to examine it more closely.
A flash—a report—and the whiz of a bullet told him that he was observed.
A volley followed from all sides.
It would therefore be impossible for his party to raise a ladder, and thus escape from their own roof on to that of the mosque.
Jack, the bullets whistling thickly around him, managed to crawl unhurt to the trapdoor and again descend into the courtyard.
"Well, Jack, what think you of the situation now?" asked Harry.
"Desperate, indeed."
"They gave you a very warm reception, my boy," said Mr. Mole.
"It will be warmer still when they capture us," said Harkaway.
"Oh, gracious, gracious! how shall we ever get out of this? Oh, dear! oh, dear! I wish I was in London once more," cried the orphan, wringing his hands.
His distress contrasted strongly with the calm, self-possessed demeanour of the beautiful Thyra at this time of supreme peril.
"There is but one thing we can do," said Jack.
"What is that?" asked Harry, anxiously.
"Break through that wall and get into the mosque; that's the only side of the building which isn't surrounded."
"But it is impossible to pierce such a wall as that," said Harry.
"We'll try, at all events," Jack responded. "Come, boys," he added, "one last desperate effort, and we'll baffle 'em yet."
The waiter and diver understood in a minute.
Hurriedly they collected the tools—pickaxes, crowbars, chisels, and hammers—and they all set to work on the masonry.
But their momentary hopes soon subsided.
The mortar had, in the course of ages, become even harder than the stone itself.
It was impossible to make any impression upon it.
When they saw this, disappointment was depicted upon every countenance.
Jack flung down, in sheer despair, the chisel with which he had attempted to break the mortar.
As the implement fell upon the stones of the courtyard, Thyra's quick ear noticed the peculiar sound.
"It is hollow beneath here," she exclaimed, eagerly.
Again testing the floor in the same way, they became convinced that she was right.
There were probably vaults beneath this courtyard, and this stone concealed the entrance to them.
Animated by this fresh hope, the party now worked away, and in a few minutes had lifted the ponderous flagstone.
A flight of rude steps, leading down into utter darkness, was discovered.
"As I thought," cried Jack, "these are vaults; we may baffle them after all. Bogey, run down immediately and see what they are like."
Bogey hesitated not a moment, but skipped down the rude steps and disappeared.
The others waited his return with great anxiety.
At this moment, a shout of triumph was raised by their enemies outside.
It signified that the cannon had been brought, and that the attack would soon recommence.
The hope of escape was still of the very slightest.
In a few moments Bogey returned.
"Well?" asked Jack.
"All cellars, massa, goin' along—oh, miles and miles under de earth, all dark, 'cepting a bit of light that comes here and there through little holes in de roof. Plenty of room to hide all of us, sar. Oh, golly, won't de nasty Turks go mad?"
"Hurrah! down you go immediately," said Jack. "Now then, ladies first. Harry, I commend Thyra to your care. Take her down."
"I can not, will not leave you, dear Jack," she cried, desperately clinging to our hero.
"No, no; I will soon be with you. For Heaven's sake. Thyra, do not hesitate now, or we shall all be lost. Go quietly; it is my wish."
Thyra resisted no more, but with Harry's assistance descended the steps into the vault.
"Now, Mr. Mole, down you go," said Jack. "Here, Figgins, you take his legs and go first, or they'll be running away with him again. Tinker, follow behind, supporting his head."
But Mr. Mole objected to this arrangement.
"What! do you think I'm an infant, to need carrying?" he said, with offended dignity. "No, though I have got patent self-controlling cork legs, I can walk down by myself."
And to prove this, he began jauntily descending the steps.
But the next moment he lost his footing, and with a cry, tumbled right down to the bottom, on to the body of the unfortunate orphan.
Luckily, it was not very far to fall, and Mr. Mole was very little hurt, though Figgins got the worst of it.
"Now, boys, down you go," cried Jack. "Hark! they are battering down the gate with artillery."
At that moment a ball tore through the doorway, shattered the top of the barricade, and at length lodged in the solid masonry.
Yells of triumph broke from the Turks.
"Quick! Tinker, Bogey, for your lives!" cried Jack.
"Is it that we are to desart ye!" cried the Irish diver. "No, Mr. Jack, I'll see you down first."
"Please make haste," said Jack almost imploringly. "Of course I shall save myself; but I'm the captain, you know, and I mustn't leave the ship till the last."
Thus reassured, the rest descended, and no sooner was the last safe in the vault, than Jack Harkaway shut down the stone in its place, thus closing the opening.
Then he hastily laid earth in the interstices round it, and tried to efface all signs of its having been recently removed.
With equal rapidity, he gathered up the crowbars, chisels, etc.
All this time the firing continued.
The door would soon give way and the enemy pour into the courtyard.
Was our hero mad, thus to remain behind while his friends escaped?
No.
His conduct was part of a desperate and deep-laid design.
He saw that if he had followed them in their rapid flight, the Turks would be sure to perceive that the stone had been removed, and this would at once enable them to discover the retreat of the whole party.
By remaining outside, he could restore the stone to its original appearance.
And this he had now done.
But his own safety?
He had thought of that, too.
Wild and desperate as was his scheme—one that required far more than ordinary courage to accomplish—gathering up the tools, he re-entered the house, and rapidly ascended to his own room.
Here, from the window, he could perceive how much the crowd of enemies had increased outside.
He was almost shaken off his feet by another discharge of artillery.
But every second was precious.
Hastily Jack robed himself in the ordinary garb of a middle-class Turk—for he had plenty of Oriental garments—bound a turban round his brows, and rubbed his face all over with a chemical powder, which greatly darkened his complexion.
He quickly stained his eyebrows a deep black, with henna.
None of his friends could now have recognised Jack Harkaway.
But how were his enemies to be deceived and eluded?
Having completed this hasty transformation, Jack descended the stairs.
He looked out into the courtyard.
A third discharge of artillery had now broken down the door, and the troops were rapidly clearing away the obstacles before entering in a body.
Loud were their shouts of triumph, and Jack recognised the countenance of Abdullah, lit up by a savage satisfaction.
But a glance sufficed.
Jack then retired into the smaller garden at the back, where he completely concealed himself under some thick shrubs.
In a few moments, the troops were all over the yard, probing and seeking in every corner.
Just as Jack had calculated, the soldiers were followed by a wild helter-skelter of Turks, of all ages and conditions, fanatical Moslems, who were ready to raze to the ground the accursed house where the Christians had taken refuge.
The soldiers were considerably surprised to find no one.
They sought in every room in vain, to their intense disappointment.
Abdullah's fury was terrible to witness.
Speedily the whole house was filled with a motley Turkish rabble.
In this fact consisted Jack's safety.
Seeing the moment when a number of the Turks were passing his hiding-place, he stepped out and mingled with them.
In the confusion, nobody noticed him.
In appearance, he was just like a score of other wild Turkish youths who were in the throng, shouting lustily "Death to the Christians!" in which cry Jack joined with great vigour.
The crisis of his danger was now over.
He had only to follow the movements of the crowd, and join the first group who, tired of their search, went back through the gate.
This soon happened, and amongst those disappointed Turks, Jack Harkaway was not for a moment conspicuous.
Mingling now with the crowd outside, Jack soon found an opportunity of slipping down a side lane, and reaching the suburbs of the town.
He was free, his
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