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do a good deed.

“We must enter the pueblo quietly,” Senor Zorro said. “There is no moon, and we will not be observed if we use caution. We shall approach the carcel from the south. Each man will have his task to do.

“Some will surround the building to give notice if any approach it. Others must be ready to beat off the soldiers, if they respond to an alarm. Others will effect an entrance to the carcel with me and rescue -the prisoners.”

“It is an excellent plan,” one said.

“That is but a small part of it. Don Carlos is a proud man and, if given time for reflection, may refuse to be rescued. We cannot allow that. Certain ones will seize him and take him from the place. Others will attend to the Dona Catalina. I will undertake to care for the Senorita. Now—we have them free. And then what?”

He heard murmurs, but no distinct reply, and so he continued to outline the plan.

“All will ride to the highway just below this place,” he said. “At that point we shall scatter. Those who have the Dona Catalina in charge will hasten with her to the hacienda of Don Alejandro Vega, where she can be hidden if necessary, and where the governor’s soldiers will hesitate before entering and seizing her.

“Those who have Don Carlos in charge will take the road to Pala, and at a certain point some ten miles from this pueblo they will be met by two natives of understanding, who will give the sign of the fox. The natives will take Don Carlos in charge and care for him.

“When these things are done, each caballero will ride to his home quietly and alone, telling what story pleases him and using great caution. I shall have conducted the senorita to a safe place by that time. She shall be given into the keeping of old Fray Felipe, a man we can trust, and he will hide her if he must. Then we will watch to see what the governor does.”

“What can he do?” a caballero asked. “Have them searched for, of course.”

“We must await developments,” Senor Zorro said. “Are all now ready?”

They assured him that they were, and so he named the men for each task, and then they left the little valley and rode slowly and cautiously around the little town and approached it from the south.

They heard the soldiers shouting and singing in the tavern, saw the lights in the presidio, and crept toward the carcel quietly, riding two by two.

In a short time it had been surrounded by quiet, determined men, and then Senor Zorro and four others dismounted and went .to the door of the building.

Chapter 31 The Rescue

SENOR ZORRO KNOCKED UPON the door with the hilt of his sword. They heard a man gasp inside, presently heard his steps on the stone flooring, and after a little time light showed through the cracks, and the aperture was opened, and the sleepy face of the guard appeared.

“What is wanted?” he asked.

Senor Zorro thrust the muzzle of his pistol through the aperture and into the man’s face, and in such fashion that the little door could not be closed.

“Open, if you value your life! Open—and make not the slightest sound!” Senor Zorro commanded.

“What-what is this?”

“Senor Zorro is talking to you!”

“By the saints—”

“Open, fool, or you die instantly!”

“I—I’ll open the door. Do not shoot, good Senor Zorro! I am only a poor guard and not a fighting man! I pray you do not shoot!”

“Open quickly!”

“As soon as I can fit key to lock, good Senor Zorro!”

They heard him rattling the keys; presently ‘one was turned in the lock, and the heavy door was thrown open.

Senor Zorro and his four companions rushed inside and slammed and fastened the door again. The guard found the muzzle of a pistol pressed against the side of his head, and would have knelt before these five masked and terrible men, only one of them caught him by the hair and held him up.

“Where sleeps the keeper of this infernal hole?” Senor Zorro demanded.

“In yonder room, senor.”

“And where have you put Don Carlos Pulido and his ladies?”

“In the common prison room, senor.” Senor Zorro motioned to the others, strode across the room, and threw open the door to the jailer’s chamber. The man already was sitting up in bed, having heard the sounds in the other room, and he blinked in fright when he beheld the highwayman by the light of the candle.

“Do not make a move, senor,” Zorro warned. “One screech, and you are a dead man. Senor Zorro confronts you.”

“May the saints preserve me—”

“Where are the keys to the prison rooms?”

“On—on that table, senor.”

Senor Zorro picked them up and then whirled upon the jailer again and rushed toward him.

“Lie down!” he commanded. “On your face, scoundrel!” Senor Zorro tore strips from a blanket and bound the jailer’s hands and feet, and made a gag which he affixed.

“To escape death,” he said then, “it is necessary for you to remain exactly as you are now, without making a sound, for some time after we have left the carcel. I shall leave it to your own judgment to decide the length of time.”

Then he hurried back into the main office, beckoned the others, and led the way down the evil-smelling hall. “Which door?” he asked of the guard. “The second one, senor.”

They hurried to it, and Senor Zorro unlocked it and threw it open. He forced the guard to hold a candle high above his head.

A gasp of pity came from beneath the highwayman’s mask He saw the aged don standing by the window, saw the two women crouched on the bench, saw the vile companions they had in this miserable place.

“Now may Heaven forgive the governor!” he cried. Senorita Lolita looked up in alarm, and then gave a glad cry. Don Carlos whirled at the highwayman’s words.

“Senor Zorro!” he gasped.

“The same, Don Carlos. I have come with some friends to rescue you.”

“I cannot allow it, senor. I shall not run away from what is in store for me. And it would avail me little to have you do the rescuing. I am accused now of harboring you, I understand. How will it look, then, if you effect my escape?”

“There is no time for argument,” Senor Zorro said. “I am not alone in this, but have twenty-six men with me. And a man of your blood, and gentle ladies such as those of your family, shall not spend an entire night in this miserable hole if we can prevent it. Caballeros!”

The last word was one of command. Two of the caballeros threw themselves upon Don Carlos, subdued him quickly, and half carried him into the hall and along it toward the office. Two others grasped the Dona Catalina by the arms, as gently as they could, and so carried her along.

Senor Zorro bowed before the Senorita and extended a hand, which she clasped gladly.

“You must trust me, Senorita,” he said.

“To love is to trust, senor.”

“All things have been arranged. Ask no questions, but do as I bid. Come.”

He threw an arm around her, and so led her from the prison room, leaving the door open behind him. If some of the miserable wretches there could win through and out of the building, Senor Zorro had no wish to prevent them. More than half of them, he judged, were there because of prejudice or injustice.

Don Carlos was causing an unearthly clamor, shouting that he refused to be rescued, and that he would stay and face the governor at the trial, and show the blood that was in him. Dona Catalina was whimpering a bit because of fright, but made no resistance.

They reached the office, and Senor Zorro ordered the guard to a corner of it, with instructions to remain there quietly for some time after they had gone. And then one of the caballeros threw open the outside door.

There was a tumult outside at that moment. Two soldiers had approached with a fellow caught stealing at the tavern, and the caballeros had stopped them. One glance at the masked faces had been enough to tell the troopers that here was something wrong.

A soldier fired a pistol, and a caballero answered the fire, neither hitting the mark. But the shooting was enough to attract the attention of those in the tavern, and also of the guards at the presidio.

Troopers at the presidio were awakened immediately and took the places of the guards, while the latter mounted and spurred down the hill to ascertain the cause of the sudden tumult at that hour of the night. Sergeant Pedro Gonzales and others hurried from the tavern. Senor Zorro and his companions found themselves facing a resistance when they least expected it.

The jailer had gathered courage enough to work himself free of gag and bonds, and he shrieked through a window of his chamber that prisoners were being rescued by Senor Zorro. His shriek was understood by Sergeant Gonzales, who screeched for his men to follow him and earn_ a part of his excellency’s reward.

But the caballeros had their three rescued prisoners on horseback, and they spurred through the gathering throng and so dashed across the plaza and toward the highway.

Shots flew about them, but no man was hit. Don Carlos Pulido was still screaming that he refused to be rescued. Dona Catalina had fainted, for which the caballero who had her in charge was grateful, since he could give more attention to his horse and weapons.

Senor Zorro rode wildly with the Senorita Lolita in the saddle before him. He spurred his magnificent horse ahead of all the others, and so led the way to the highroad. And when I he had reached it, he pulled up his mount and watched the others come galloping to the spot, to ascertain whether there I had been casualties.

“Carry out your orders, caballeros!” he commanded, when he saw that all had won through safely.

And so the band was broken into three detachments. One rushed along the Pala Road with Don Carlos. Another took the highway that would lead them to the hacienda of Don Alejandro. Senor Zorro, riding without any of his comrades at his side, galloped toward Fray Felipe’s place, the senorita’s arms clasped tightly about his neck, and the senorita’s voice in his ear.

“I knew that you would come for me, senor,” she said. “I knew you were a true man, and would not see me and my parents remain in that miserable place.”

Senor Zorro did not answer her with words, for it was not a time for speech with his enemies so close at his heels, but his arm pressed the senorita closer to him.

He had reached the crest of the first hill, and now he stopped the horse to listen for sounds of pursuit, and to watch the flickering lights far behind.

For there was a multitude of lights in the plaza now, and in all the houses, for the pueblo had been aroused. The presidio building was ablaze with light, and he could hear a trumpet being blown, and knew that every available trooper would be sent on the chase.

The sound of galloping horses came to his ears. The troopers knew in what direction the rescuers had traveled; and the pursuit would be swift and relentless, with his excellency on the scene to offer fabulous rewards and urge on his men with promises of good posts and promotion.

But one thing pleased Senor Zorro as his horse galloped down the dusty highway and

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