while the swift succession of great events in the lauranian capital had occupied with immediate emergency the minds of the men, it had been different with the women. out in the streets there had been vivid scenes, hot blood, and excitement. the dangers of war, and the occasion of close and involved fighting, had given many opportunities for acts of devotion and brutality. the brave man had displayed his courage; the cruel had indulged his savagery; all the intermediate types had been thrilled with the business of the moment, and there had scarce been time for any but involuntary terror. within the houses it was different.
lucile started up at the first sound of firing. there was not much to hear, a distant and confused popping with an occasional ragged crash; but she knew what all this meant and shuddered. the street below seemed from the noise to be full of people. she rose and going to the window looked down. by the sickly, uncertain light of the gas-lamps men were working busily at a barricade, which ran across the street about twenty yards from the door and on the side towards the palace. she watched the bustling figures with strange interest. they distracted her thoughts and she felt that if she had nothing to look at she would go mad with the dreadful suspense. not a detail escaped her.
how hard they worked! men with crowbars and pickaxes were prizing up the paving-stones; others carried them along, staggering under their weight; others again piled them into a strong wall across the road. there were two or three boys working away as hard as any of them. one little fellow dropped the stone he was carrying on his foot, and forthwith sat down to cry bitterly. his companion came up and kicked him to stimulate his efforts, but he only cried the more. presently a water-cart arrived, and the thirsty builders went by threes and fours to drink, dipping two tin mugs and a gallipot in the water.
the people in the houses round were made to open their doors, and the rebels unceremoniously dragged out all sorts of things to put on their barricade. one party discovered several barrels which they appeared to consider a valuable prize. knocking in the end of one cask they began filling it, spadeful by spadeful, with the earth which the removal of the pavement had laid bare. it was a long business, but at last they finished and tried to lift the barrel on to the wall; but it was too heavy, and falling with a crash to the ground it broke all in pieces. at this they were furious and disputed angrily, till an officer with a red sash came up and silenced them. they did not attempt to fill the other casks, but re-entering the house brought out a comfortable sofa and sat down on it sullenly, lighting their pipes. one by one, however, they got to work again, coming out of their sulky fit by degrees, and careful of their dignity. and all this time the barricade grew steadily.
lucile wondered why no one had entered savrola's house. presently she perceived the reason; there was a picket of four men with rifles on the doorstep. nothing had been forgotten by that comprehensive mind. so the hours passed. from time to time her thoughts reverted to the tragedy which had swept upon her life, and she would sink back on to the sofa in despair. once, from sheer weariness, she dozed for an hour. the distant firing had died away and, though single shots were occasionally heard, the city was generally silent. waking with a strange feeling of uneasy trouble she ran again to the window. the barricade was completed now, and the builders were lying down behind it. their weapons leaned against the wall on which two or three watchers stood, looking constantly up the street.
presently there was a hammering at the street-door, which made her heart beat with fear. she leaned cautiously out of the window. the picket was still at its post, but another man had joined them. finding that he could not obtain an answer to his knocking, he stooped down, pushed something under the door, and went his way. after a time she summoned up courage to creep down, through the darkness of the staircase, to see what this might be. by the light of a match she saw that it was a note addressed simply lucile with the number of the house and street,—for the streets were all numbered in laurania as in american cities. it was from savrola, in pencil and to this effect: the city and forts have passed into our hands, but there will be fighting at daylight. on no account leave the house or expose yourself.
fighting at daylight! she looked at the clock,—a quarter to five, and already the sky was growing brighter; the time was at hand then! fear, grief, anxiety, and, not the least painful, resentment at her husband conflicted in her mind. but the sleeping figures behind the barricade seemed to be troubled by none of these feelings; they lay silent and still, weary men who had no cares. but she knew it was coming, something loud and terrible that would wake them with a start. she felt as though she was watching a play at the theatre, the window suggesting a box. she had turned from it for a moment, when suddenly a rifle-shot rang out, apparently about three hundred yards down the street towards the palace. then there was a splutter of firing, a bugle-call, and the sound of shouting. the defenders of the barricade sprang up in mad haste and seized their weapons. there was more firing, but still they did not reply, and she dared not put her head out of the window to see what prevented them. they were all greatly excited, holding their rifles over the barricade, and many talking in quick short sentences. in a moment a crowd of men, nearly a hundred it seemed, ran up to the wall and began scrambling over, helped by the others. they were friends, then; it occurred to her that there must be another barricade, and that the one under the window was in the second line. this was actually the case, and the first had been captured. all the time firing from the direction of the palace continued.
as soon as the fugitives were all across the wall, the defenders of the second line began to fire. the rifles close by sounded so much louder than the others, and gave forth such bright flashes. but the light was growing every minute, and soon she could see the darting puffs of smoke. the rebels were armed with many kinds of firearms. some, with old, muzzle-loading muskets, had to stand up and descend from the barricade to use their ramrods; others, armed with more modern weapons, remained crouching behind their cover and fired continually.
the scene, filled with little foreshortened figures, still suggested the stage of a theatre viewed from the gallery. she did not as yet feel frightened; no harm had been done, and no one seemed to be any the worse.
she had scarcely completed this thought when she noticed a figure being lifted off the barricade to the ground. in the growing daylight the pale face showed distinctly, and a deadly feeling of sickness came over her in a moment; but she stood spell-bound by the sight. four men went off with the wounded one, carrying him by the shoulders and feet, so that he drooped in the middle. when they had passed out of her view, she looked back to the wall. there were five more men wounded; four had to be carried, the other leaned on a comrade's arm. two more figures had also been pulled off the barricade, and laid carelessly on the pavement out of the way. nobody seemed to take any notice of these, but just let them lie close to the area-railings.
then from the far end of the street came the sound of drums and the shrill call of a bugle, repeated again and again. the rebels began to shoot in mad excitement as fast as they could; several fell, and above the noise of the firing rose a strange sound, a sort of hoarse, screaming whoop, coming momentarily nearer.
a man on the barricade jumped off and began to run down the street; five, six others followed at once; then all the defenders but three hurried away from that strange approaching cry. several tried to drag with them the wounded, of which there already were a few more; these cried out in pain and begged to be left alone. one man, she saw, dragging another by the ankle, bumping him along the rough roadway in spite of his entreaties. the three men who had stayed fired methodically from behind their breastwork. all this took several seconds; and the menacing shout came nearer and louder all the time.
then in an instant a wave of men,—soldiers in blue uniforms faced with buff—surged up to the barricade and over it. an officer, quite a boy, in front of them all, jumped down the other side, shouting, "make a clear sweep of the cowardly devils,—come on!"
the three steadfast men had disappeared as rocks beneath the incoming tide. crowds of soldiers climbed over the barricade; she could see groups of them swarming round each of the wounded rebels, jobbing downwards with their bayonets savagely. and then the spell broke, the picture swam, and she rushed screaming from the window to plunge her face among the sofa-cushions.
the uproar was now terrific. the musketry-fire was loud and continuous, especially from the direction of the main avenue which ran parallel to the street in which savrola lived, and the shouting and trampling of men added to the din. gradually the wave of fighting rolled past the house and on towards the mayoralty. as she realised this, all her own troubles returned to her mind. the fight was going against the rebels; she thought of savrola. and then she prayed,—prayed convulsively, sending her entreaties into space in the hope that they would not fall on unheeding ears. she spoke no name; but the gods, who are omniscient, may have guessed, with sardonic smiles, that she prayed for the victory of the rebel she loved over her husband, the president.
presently there was a tremendous noise from the direction of the mayoralty. "cannons," she thought, but she dared not look out of the window; the horrid sights had sickened curiosity itself. but she could hear the fire coming nearer, coming back again; and at that she felt a strange joy; something of the joy of success in war, amid all her terrors. there was a noise of people streaming past the house; shots were fired under the windows; then came a great hammering and battering at the street-door. they were breaking into the house! she rushed to the door of the room and locked it. down-stairs there were several shots, and the noise of splintering wood. the firing of the retreating troops drifted back past the house and towards the palace; but she did not heed it; another sound paralysed her attention, the sound of approaching footsteps. someone was coming up-stairs. she held her breath. the handle turned, and then the unknown, finding the door locked, kicked it savagely. lucile screamed.
the kicking ceased, and she heard the stranger give a dreadful groan. "for the mercy of heaven, let me in! i am wounded and have no arms." he began to wail pitifully.
lucile listened. it seemed that there was but one, and if he were wounded, he would not harm her. there was another groan outside. human sympathy rose in her heart; she unlocked the door and opened it cautiously.
a man walked quickly into the room: it was miguel. "i beg your excellency's pardon," he said suavely, with that composure which always strengthened his mean soul; "i am in need of a hiding-place."
"but your wound?" she said.
"a ruse-de-guerre; i wanted you to let me in. where can i hide? they may be here soon."
"there on the roof, or in the observatory," she said pointing to the other door.
"do not tell them."
"why should i?" she replied. calm though the man undoubtedly was, she despised him; there was no dirt, she knew well, that he would not eat if it suited his purpose to do so.
he went up and concealed himself on the roof under the big telescope. meanwhile she waited. emotions had succeeded each other so rapidly that day in her heart that she felt incapable of further stress; a dull feeling of pain remained, like the numbness and sense of injury after a severe wound. the firing receded towards the palace, and presently all was comparatively silent in the city again.
at about nine o'clock the bell of the front-entrance rang; but she did not dare to leave the room now that the door was broken down. then after a while came the sound of people coming up-stairs.
"there is no lady here; the young lady went back the night before last to her aunt's," said a voice. it was the old woman's; with a bound of joy and a passionate craving for the sympathy of her own sex, lucile rushed to the door and opened it. bettine was there, and with her an officer of the rebel army, who handed a letter to her with these words: "the president sends this to you, madam."
"the president!"
"of the council of public safety."
the note merely informed her that the government troops had been repulsed and ended with the words: only one result is now possible, and that will be attained in a few hours.
the officer, saying that he would wait down-stairs in case she might wish to send an answer, left the room. lucile pulled the old nurse inside the door and embraced her, weeping. where had she been all that terrible night? bettine had been in the cellar. it seemed that savrola had thought of her as of everything; he had told her to take her bed down there, and had even had the place carpeted and furnished on the preceding afternoon. there she had remained as he had told her. her perfect trust in her idol had banished all fears on her own account, but she had "fidgeted terribly" about him. he was all she had in the world; others dissipate their affections on a husband, children, brothers, and sisters; all the love of her kind old heart was centred in the man she had fostered since he was a helpless baby. and he did not forget. she displayed with pride a slip of paper, bearing the words, safe and well.
there was now a subdued sound of firing, from the direction of the palace, which continued throughout the morning; but miguel, seeing that the streets were again quiet, emerged from his concealment and re-entered the room. "i want to see the president," he said.
"my husband?" asked lucile.
"no, your excellency, se?or savrola." miguel was quick in adapting himself to circumstances.
lucile thought of the officer; she mentioned him to miguel. "he will take you to the mayoralty."
the secretary was delighted; he ran down-stairs and they saw him no more.
the old nurse, with a practical soul, busied herself about getting breakfast. lucile, to divert her thoughts, aided her, and soon—such is our composition—found comfort in eggs and bacon. they were relieved to find that a picket had again been posted at the street-door. bettine discovered this, for lucile, her mood unchanged, would not look into the street where she had seen such grim spectacles. and she did right, for though the barricade was now deserted, nearly twenty objects that had a few hours before been men, lay around or upon it. but about eleven some labourers arrived with two scavengers' carts; and soon only the bloodstains on the pavement showed that there had been any destruction other than that of property.
the morning wore slowly and anxiously away. the firing near the palace was continual, but distant. sometimes it swelled into a dull roar, at others the individual shots sounded in a sort of quick rattle. at last, at about half-past two, it stopped abruptly. lucile trembled. the quarrel had been decided, one way or the other. her mind refused to face all the possibilities. at times she clung in passionate fear to the old nurse, who tried in vain to soothe her; at others she joined her in the household tasks, or submitted to tasting the various meals which the poor old soul prepared for her in the hopes of killing care with comfort.
the ominous silence that followed the cessation of the firing did not last long. it was while lucile was being coaxed by bettine to eat some custard-pudding that she had made on purpose for her, that the report of the first great gun reached them. the tremendous explosion, though a long way off, made the windows rattle. she shuddered. what was this? she had hoped that all was over; but one explosion succeeded another, until the thunder of a cannonade from the harbour almost drowned their voices. it was a weary waiting for the two women.