The Gadfly - E. L. Voynich (phonics readers .txt) 📗
- Author: E. L. Voynich
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of the cavalry horses were thundering up the hill
behind him; and it would have been worse than
useless to stay and be taken too. Turning in the
saddle as he galloped away, to fire a last shot in
the teeth of the nearest pursuer, he saw the Gadfly,
with blood on his face, trampled under the feet
of horses and soldiers and spies; and heard the
savage curses of the captors, the yells of triumph
and rage.
Montanelli did not notice what had happened;
he had moved away from the steps, and was trying
to calm the terrified people. Presently, as he
stooped over the wounded spy, a startled movement
of the crowd made him look up. The soldiers were
crossing the square, dragging their
prisoner after them by the rope with which his
hands were tied. His face was livid with pain and
exhaustion, and he panted fearfully for breath;
but he looked round at the Cardinal, smiling with
white lips, and whispered:
“I c-cong-gratulate your Eminence.”
… . .
Five days later Martini reached Forli. He
had received from Gemma by post a bundle of
printed circulars, the signal agreed upon in case of
his being needed in any special emergency; and,
remembering the conversation on the terrace, he
guessed the truth at once. All through the journey
he kept repeating to himself that there was
no reason for supposing anything to have happened
to the Gadfly, and that it was absurd to
attach any importance to the childish superstitions
of so nervous and fanciful a person; but the
more he reasoned with himself against the idea,
the more firmly did it take possession of his mind.
“I have guessed what it is: Rivarez is taken, of
course?” he said, as he came into Gemma’s room.
“He was arrested last Thursday, at Brisighella.
He defended himself desperately and wounded the
captain of the squadron and a spy.”
“Armed resistance; that’s bad!”
“It makes no difference; he was too deeply
compromised already for a pistol-shot more or less
to affect his position much.”
“What do you think they are going to do with
him?”
She grew a shade paler even than before.
“I think,” she said; “that we must not wait to
find out what they mean to do.”
“You think we shall be able to effect a rescue?”
“We MUST.”
He turned away and began to whistle, with his
hands behind his back. Gemma let him think
undisturbed. She was sitting still, leaning her
head against the back of the chair, and looking
out into vague distance with a fixed and tragic
absorption. When her face wore that expression,
it had a look of Durer’s “Melancolia.”
“Have you seen him?” Martini asked, stopping
for a moment in his tramp.
“No; he was to have met me here the next
morning.”
“Yes, I remember. Where is he?”
“In the fortress; very strictly guarded, and,
they say, in chains.”
He made a gesture of indifference.
“Oh, that’s no matter; a good file will get rid
of any number of chains. If only he isn’t
wounded–-”
“He seems to have been slightly hurt, but
exactly how much we don’t know. I think you
had better hear the account of it from Michele
himself; he was present at the arrest.”
“How does he come not to have been taken
too? Did he run away and leave Rivarez in the
lurch?”
“It’s not his fault; he fought as long as anybody
did, and followed the directions given him to
the letter. For that matter, so did they all. The
only person who seems to have forgotten, or
somehow made a mistake at the last minute, is
Rivarez himself. There’s something inexplicable
about it altogether. Wait a moment; I will call
Michele.”
She went out of the room, and presently came
back with Michele and a broad-shouldered mountaineer.
“This is Marco,” she said. “You have heard
of him; he is one of the smugglers. He has just
got here, and perhaps will be able to tell us more.
Michele, this is Cesare Martini, that I spoke to
you about. Will you tell him what happened, as
far as you saw it?”
Michele gave a short account of the skirmish
with the squadron.
“I can’t understand how it happened,” he concluded.
“Not one of us would have left him if
we had thought he would be taken; but his directions
were quite precise, and it never occurred to
us, when he threw down his cap, that he would
wait to let them surround him. He was close beside
the roan—I saw him cut the tether—and I
handed him a loaded pistol myself before I
mounted. The only thing I can suppose is that
he missed his footing,—being lame,—in trying to
mount. But even then, he could have fired.”
“No, it wasn’t that,” Marcone interposed.
“He didn’t attempt to mount. I was the last one
to go, because my mare shied at the firing; and I
looked round to see whether he was safe. He
would have got off clear if it hadn’t been for the
Cardinal.”
“Ah!” Gemma exclaimed softly; and Martini
repeated in amazement: “The Cardinal?”
“Yes; he threw himself in front of the pistol—
confound him! I suppose Rivarez must have
been startled, for he dropped his pistol-hand and
put the other one up like this”—laying the back
of his left wrist across his eyes—“and of course
they all rushed on him.”
“I can’t make that out,” said Michele. “It’s
not like Rivarez to lose his head at a crisis.”
“Probably he lowered his pistol for fear of killing
an unarmed man,” Martini put in. Michele
shrugged his shoulders.
“Unarmed men shouldn’t poke their noses into
the middle of a fight. War is war. If Rivarez
had put a bullet into His Eminence, instead of letting
himself be caught like a tame rabbit, there’d
be one honest man the more and one priest the less.”
He turned away, biting his moustache. His
anger was very near to breaking down in tears.
“Anyway,” said Martini, “the thing’s done,
and there’s no use wasting time in discussing how
it happened. The question now is how we’re to
arrange an escape for him. I suppose you’re all
willing to risk it?”
Michele did not even condescend to answer the
superfluous question, and the smuggler only remarked
with a little laugh: “I’d shoot my own brother, if he
weren’t willing.”
“Very well, then–- First thing; have you
got a plan of the fortress?”
Gemma unlocked a drawer and took out several
sheets of paper.
“I have made out all the plans. Here is the
ground floor of the fortress; here are the upper
and lower stories of the towers, and here the plan
of the ramparts. These are the roads leading to
the valley, and here are the paths and hiding-places
in the mountains, and the underground passages.”
“Do you know which of the towers he is
in?”
“The east one, in the round room with the
grated window. I have marked it on the plan.”
“How did you get your information?”
“From a man nicknamed ‘The Cricket,’ a soldier
of the guard. He is cousin to one of our men—Gino.”
“You have been quick about it.”
“There’s no time to lose. Gino went into
Brisighella at once; and some of the plans we
already had. That list of hiding-places was made
by Rivarez himself; you can see by the handwriting.”
“What sort of men are the soldiers of the guard?”
“That we have not been able to find out yet;
the Cricket has only just come to the place, and
knows nothing about the other men.”
“We must find out from Gino what the Cricket
himself is like. Is anything known of the government’s
intentions? Is Rivarez likely to be tried
in Brisighella or taken in to Ravenna?”
“That we don’t know. Ravenna, of course, is
the chief town of the Legation and by law cases
of importance can be tried only there, in the
Tribunal of First Instance. But law doesn’t count
for much in the Four Legations; it depends on the
personal fancy of anybody who happens to be in power.”
“They won’t take him in to Ravenna,” Michele interposed.
“What makes you think so?”
“I am sure of it. Colonel Ferrari, the military
Governor at Brisighella, is uncle to the officer that
Rivarez wounded; he’s a vindictive sort of brute
and won’t give up a chance to spite an enemy.”
“You think he will try to keep Rivarez here?”
“I think he will try to get him hanged.”
Martini glanced quickly at Gemma. She was
very pale, but her face had not changed at the
words. Evidently the idea was no new one to her.
“He can hardly do that without some formality,”
she said quietly; “but he might possibly
get up a courtmartial on some pretext or other,
and justify himself afterwards by saying that the
peace of the town required it.”
“But what about the Cardinal? Would he
consent to things of that kind?”
“He has no jurisdiction in military affairs.”
“No, but he has great influence. Surely the
Governor would not venture on such a step without
his consent?”
“He’ll never get that,” Marcone interrupted.
“Montanelli was always against the military
commissions, and everything of the kind. So
long as they keep him in Brisighella nothing
serious can happen; the Cardinal will always take
the part of any prisoner. What I am afraid of is
their taking him to Ravenna. Once there, he’s
lost.”
“We shouldn’t let him get there,” said Michele.
“We could manage a rescue on the road; but to
get him out of the fortress here is another
matter.”
“I think,” said Gemma; “that it would be
quite useless to wait for the chance of his being
transferred to Ravenna. We must make the attempt
at Brisighella, and we have no time to lose.
Cesare, you and I had better go over the plan of
the fortress together, and see whether we can
think out anything. I have an idea in my head,
but I can’t get over one point.”
“Come, Marcone,” said Michele, rising; “we
will leave them to think out their scheme. I have
to go across to Fognano this afternoon, and I
want you to come with me. Vincenzo hasn’t sent
those cartridges, and they ought to have been
here yesterday.”
When the two men had gone, Martini went up
to Gemma and silently held out his hand. She let
her fingers lie in his for a moment.
“You were always a good friend, Cesare,” she
said at last; “and a very present help in trouble.
And now let us discuss plans.”
CHAPTER III.
“AND I once more most earnestly assure Your
Eminence that your refusal is endangering the
peace of the town.”
The Governor tried to preserve the respectful
tone due to a high dignitary of the Church; but
there was audible irritation in his voice. His liver
was out of order, his wife was running up heavy
bills, and his temper had been sorely tried during
the last three weeks. A sullen, disaffected populace,
whose dangerous mood grew daily more apparent; a
district honeycombed with plots and bristling with
hidden weapons; an inefficient garrison, of whose
loyalty he was more than doubtful, and a Cardinal
whom he had pathetically described to his adjutant
as the “incarnation of immaculate pig-headedness,”
had already reduced him to the verge of desperation.
Now he was saddled with the Gadfly, an animated
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