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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/30951-8.txt b/30951-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..40e3d2f --- /dev/null +++ b/30951-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,7690 @@ +Project Gutenberg's The Boy Allies with the Cossacks, by Clair W. Hayes + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Boy Allies with the Cossacks + Or, A Wild Dash over the Carpathians + +Author: Clair W. Hayes + +Release Date: January 13, 2010 [EBook #30951] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY ALLIES WITH THE COSSACKS *** + + + + +Produced by Roger Frank, D Alexander and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + + + +THE BOY ALLIES WITH THE COSSACKS + +OR + +A WILD DASH OVER THE CARPATHIAN MOUNTAINS + +By CLAIR W. HAYES + +AUTHOR OF + + "The Boy Allies at Liège" + "The Boy Allies On the Firing Line" + "The Boy Allies In the Trenches" + +A. L. BURT COMPANY + +NEW YORK + + + + +Copyright, 1915 + +By A. L. Burt Company + +The Boy Allies with the Cossacks + + + + +[Illustration: ALEXIS--FROM HIS CANTEEN POURED WATER OVER THE LAD'S +FACE. _Page 203._ _The Boy Allies With the Cossacks_.] + + + + +THE BOY ALLIES WITH THE COSSACKS. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +FLYING. + + +"What's that below, Hal?" + +The speaker was Chester Crawford, an American lad of some 16 years. + +Hal Paine allowed his eyes to turn from the steering wheel and glanced +over the side of the flying aëroplane. + +"I don't see anything," he replied, after a careful scrutiny below. + +"Neither do I, now," said Chester, straining his eyes. + +At this moment the third occupant of the machine made his presence +known. + +"Woof! Woof!" he exclaimed. + +The third speaker was Marquis, a dog. + +"Woof! Woof!" he barked again. + +Hal, with a quick move, slackened the speed of the aëroplane, and let it +glide gently closer to the earth. + +"Must be something wrong," he confided to Chester, "or Marquis wouldn't +be barking like that." + +Both lads peered into the darkness that engulfed them on all sides. As +far as the eye could penetrate there was nothing but blackness, solid, +intense. + +"Let's go a little lower, Hal," whispered Chester. + +Under Hal's firm hand the aëroplane came down gently, until at last it +was soaring close to the treetops. And now, suddenly, both lads made out +the cause of Marquis's uneasiness. + +Beneath them were thousands upon thousands of armed men. To the north, +to the south, and to the east and west the dense mass of humanity +stretched out. Hal and Chester, flying close to the earth, at last could +make out moving forms below them. + +Suddenly it became light. Not broad daylight, but the darkness gave way +enough for the lads to distinguish what lay below them. The dawn of +another day was breaking. + +At the same instant that the lads made out the huge mass of humanity +upon the ground their presence in the air was discovered. There came the +sound of a single shot and the whiz of a bullet, as it sped close to +Hal's ear. + +With a quick movement the lad sent the plane soaring high in the air +once more. So sudden was the movement that Chester, caught unprepared, +lost his balance, and saved himself from tumbling to the ground only by +clutching the side of the machine. Marquis also had a narrow escape from +being thrown out. He let out a loud yelp of fear, as he was thrown +violently against Chester. The lad threw out a hand and grabbed him by +the scruff of the neck, just as it seemed he would plunge to certain +destruction. + +"Say!" he called to Hal, when he finally regained his breath and his +head. "What's the matter with you? You almost dumped us both out." + +"Did I?" replied Hal briefly. "Well, as long as you didn't fall it's all +right. We had to come up suddenly, or the chances were we would have +gone down suddenly. But it's my fault. I should have given you warning. +Are you hurt?" + +"No," replied Chester. + +"I'll be careful next time," said Hal. "You'll have to forgive me this +once." + +"Say no more about it," answered Chester. "But what was the cause of +this sudden rise?" + +"Cause!" repeated Hal in astonishment. "You don't mean to tell me you +don't know the cause? Didn't you hear that shot?" + +"Yes, I heard it. But how do you know whether it was fired by friend or +foe?" + +"I can't see as that would make any difference if it happened to hit us. +However, I'm morally certain they were Germans." + +"Well, maybe they were. What are we going to do now?" + +"We'll stay up here until we are absolutely certain we have passed over +the German lines. Then we'll come down." + +The machine was high in the air now, and, peering intently over the +side, as he did, Chester was unable to make out anything below in the +early morning light. + +But in the rear, soaring high in the air, although neither lad realized +it, a new danger threatened. When the presence of the boys' plane had +been discovered, a German craft had immediately risen, and was now in +pursuit. + +Glancing over his shoulder, Chester was the first to discover that they +were followed. At the same moment that he perceived the pursuing machine +there came a shot from the enemy. + +There was no need for Chester to cry out to Hal. The sound of the shot +told the latter of their danger, and he immediately threw the speed +lever over as far as it would go. + +The machine bounded forward. + +But the pursuer also came on faster than before; and, while it was +apparent that he was not lessening the distance between the two craft, +he nevertheless was still in range, and his rifle continued to crack. +However, neither the machine nor its three occupants were struck. + +Chester took a snap shot at the other craft with his revolver, but the +bullet fell short. While the enemy could pepper them at will with his +rifle, a bullet from the lad's revolver could not reach him. + +Hal heard the sound of Chester's revolver, and called out: + +"Did you hit him?" + +"No!" Chester shouted back, "he's too far behind. But he'll get us in a +minute if we don't do something." To himself he added: "If I only had a +rifle!" + +"You be ready with your revolver," Hal called to his friend, "and I'll +soon fix that. It's our only chance." + +Abruptly he slackened the speed of the machine, and swiftly the enemy +came on. So suddenly had Hal acted that the man at the wheel of the +pursuing machine could not act promptly enough, and was within range of +Chester's revolver before he could slow down. + +As the first machine righted after its abrupt halt, Chester took +deliberate aim and fired, even at the moment that a bullet passed close +to his head. + +There was a yell from the pursuing machine. A man leaped suddenly to his +feet, shaking the frail craft violently as he did so, waved his arms +once, twice, and toppled into space. + +"I got one of 'em," Chester shouted to Hal, and his lips shut grimly. + +"Good for you!" Hal shouted back. + +Even Marquis realized that it was time to be pleased, and he sent up a +sharp bark of joy. His canine intelligence told him that something that +threatened had been overcome. + +But the man at the wheel of the German aëroplane, now that he was alone, +was not minded to give up the chase. The machine darted at the boys' +craft suddenly, and, but for the fact that Hal at that very moment +happened to glance over his shoulder, the sharp-pointed prow of the +German craft would have cut them down. + +With a sudden twist of the wheel, however, Hal sent the machine out of +the path of the German, and, as the enemy sped by, Chester took a snap +shot with his revolver. + +Evidently he missed, for the German checked his plane and returned to +the attack. + +"So," said Hal to himself, "two can play at that game." + +Once more he avoided the German rush; and then, wheeling his own craft +at the moment the German sped by, he dashed in pursuit. The enemy, doing +the work of two men, did not perceive this change in tactics by his +foes, and, even as he slowed down to turn and make another attack, the +point of the lad's machine plowed into him. + +There was a ripping, tearing sound; the German plane wavered and started +to fall as the craft in which the boys were flying dashed by. But, by a +superhuman effort, the German succeeded in righting his craft. + +Then, holding the wheel steady with one hand, he calmly produced a +revolver and took deliberate aim at Hal. + +There was a sharp crack, followed immediately by another, but Hal was +unharmed. + +Realizing the German's purpose, Chester's weapon had spoken a second +before that of the enemy. The lad had not had time to take careful aim, +but the bullet sped true, striking the German squarely in the forehead, +even at the moment his finger pressed the trigger of his own revolver. + +Chester saw the man throw up his hands and fall backward. The German +plane, now without a hand to keep it steady, rocked crazily for several +moments, then turned turtle and went tumbling over and over toward the +ground. + +"Did you get him, Chester?" asked Hal, who had not turned his head, and +therefore had not perceived his own danger. + +"Yes, I got him," replied Chester simply. + +"Good!" returned Hal. "And the machine?" + +"Gone!" + +The lads now paused to take stock of their own damage, if any. There was +none. Not a German bullet had so much as struck the machine. + +"They are not very good marksmen, are they?" said Hal, with a slight +grin. + +"Doesn't look that way," returned Chester. "However, maybe those fellows +are not the best specimens." + +"Maybe not," replied Hal. + +"What next?" asked Chester, after a slight pause. + +"Guess we might as well go on," replied Hal. "There may be some more of +those German machines flying after us, so I guess it behooves us to get +away from here as soon as possible." + +"I guess you are right," Chester acquiesced. + +Once more the aëroplane straightened itself out on its course and, +flying high--absolutely hidden from the ground by a dense mass of black +clouds that seemed to spring up as if by magic--sped on. + +Hal, with firm hands on the wheel, kept his gaze directly ahead. Chester +settled himself comfortably in his seat again, and Marquis, after +sniffing about for several moments, finally composed himself to sleep. + +In spite of the fact that he was flying far above ground, the dog had +not shown a sign of nervousness or fright. Evidently he had no fear. +Possibly through his head flashed the thought that if these young boys +who were caring for him had saved him once, it was no more than they +would do again. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +BEYOND THE ENEMY. + + +Hal Paine and Chester Crawford, two young American lads, had already +seen much active service in the great European war of 1914, the greatest +war of all history. + +With Hal's mother they had been in the capital of Germany when the +conflagration broke out. In making their way from Berlin they had been +separated from Mrs. Paine and, thrown upon their resources, it became +necessary for them to make their way out of Germany alone, or else to +stay in Berlin for an indefinite time. The boys elected to leave. + +With Major Raoul Derevaux, a French Officer, then a captain, and Captain +Harry Anderson, an Englishman, they had finally succeeded in making +their way into the Belgian lines. They had witnessed the heroic defense +of the Belgians at Liège, and had themselves taken part in the battle. +Having accomplished several missions successfully, they had come to be +looked upon with the greatest respect by the Belgian commander. + +At Louvain Hal was wounded, and Chester had him conveyed to Brussels. +Here the lads again fell in with Captain Anderson, and, through the good +offices of the latter, eventually found themselves attached to the +British forces on the continent. They had gained favor in the eyes of +Sir John French, the British Field Marshal in command of the British +troops, and had successfully accomplished several difficult missions. + +Taken prisoners by the Germans, they had been saved from death at the +hands of a firing squad by the Emperor of Germany himself, and had +finally been taken back to Berlin. + +In the streets of the German capital, one day, a message had been put +into their hands by an English prisoner, who declared that its delivery +to the Grand Duke Nicholas, commander of the hosts of the Czar of +Russia, was a matter of much moment. + +Displaying great resourcefulness and bravery, the lads had succeeded in +escaping from Berlin in an aëroplane, as narrated in "The Boy Allies on +the Firing Line," the same in which, at the opening of this story, we +find them flying swiftly eastward. + +Crack revolver shots, and having skill in the use of the sword and with +their fists, the boys had fought themselves out of many ticklish +situations. And now, free again, they were making all speed to deliver +the message from the combined leaders of two countries to Grand Duke +Nicholas, a message that would mean closer coöperation between the +Russians in the east and the British and French forces in the west. + +The Russian campaign so far could hardly be called a success. True, the +first German advance into Poland, with Warsaw as its object, had been +checked, and the invader had been driven back; but the mighty legions of +the Czar of all the Russias could not be mobilized with the swiftness of +the Kaiser's troops; and, when mobilized, could not be transported to +the front with the same dispatch. + +Reënforced after their first defeat in Poland, the Germans had begun a +new drive into the heart of Poland. Day after day they drew nearer and +nearer to the little capital, Warsaw--the Russians retreating before +them. + +But now, within two days' march of Warsaw, the Russians held steadily, +and, try as he might, the German commander could not break through this +line of steel. Grand Duke Nicholas, commander-in-chief of the Russian +armies--who at first had been with the southern army opposing the +Austrians and advancing upon Cracow, in Galicia--had hurried north, to +take personal command in Poland. + +His presence had instilled new vigor into the Russian troops, and, after +several days of defensive action, the Russian troops had at last resumed +the offensive. + +It was toward this mighty army that the aëroplane that had borne the +boys through the heart of the enemy was now flying swiftly. + +"Seems to me," said Hal, "that by this time we must have passed the +German lines. I guess we might as well go down a bit and have a look +around." + +Accordingly the machine glided nearer the earth. The day was dark and +foggy, and at first the lads could discern nothing below but a great +blur. + +They drew closer. + +At that moment there came a shot from below. Hal instinctively threw +over the lever in an effort to take the craft out of harm's way. + +But the machine did not respond to his touch. + +"Great Scott!" he cried. "That one bullet must have put us out of +commission. We'll have to go down, or be shot to pieces up here." + +Gently the little craft glided toward the earth; and now the boys could +make out the objects below. + +On all sides, stretching out as far as the eye could see, was a mighty +mass of moving men. + +"Germans?" asked Chester anxiously. + +"We'll soon see," replied Hal briefly. + +It was apparent now that those below, realizing that the aircraft was +falling, would not fire at it again. With upturned eyes thousands of men +watched the flight of the little plane, as it soared down among them. + +Hal looked closely at the men, as the machine drew near the ground, and +then exclaimed: + +"No, they are not Germans; Russians, that's what they are." + +Chester raised a feeble cheer. + +"Hurrah!" he shouted. + +Marquis, aroused by the sound of the lad's voices, arose and stretched. +Even he seemed pleased. + +And now the aëroplane bumped the ground, and the lads stepped out to see +a long line of rifle barrels confronting them. + +The lads threw up their hands instantly, but Marquis's back bristled and +he growled threateningly. + +"Keep quiet!" Chester commanded, and the dog grew still. An officer +approached the lads. + +"What do you here?" he demanded, in some language the lads could not +understand. + +The lads shook their heads, and the officer tried again, this time in +German. + +"What do you here?" he demanded. + +As briefly as possible, Hal, acting as spokesman, explained. The +officer's incredulous gaze grew more so as the lad went on with his +story. When the lad had finished, he said simply: + +"I don't believe you!" + +Hal was angry in a second. He took a step toward the officer. + +"What do you mean by that?" he demanded. + +The officer stood his ground. + +"Just what I say," he replied. "I don't believe you. The tale you tell +is impossible." + +Chester stepped into the breach. He took Hal by the arm. + +"Of course such a tale is hard to believe," he said. "But, nevertheless, +it is true. We carry an important message for the Grand Duke." + +"Well," said the officer, "I don't think you will see him. He is too +busy to give up his time to listen to such a tale as yours." + +But at this moment a second officer, apparently the other's superior, +approached. To him, upon request, Hal repeated his story. This officer +also looked incredulous, but the result was different. + +"You tell a very strange story," he said, "but it is not for me to pass +upon its veracity. You shall be given an audience with the Grand Duke; +but, mark me well, if it is found that you have been lying--that you +have nothing of importance, it will go hard with you." + +"We have no fear of that, sir," said Chester briefly. + +"All right, then. Follow me." + +The lads did as ordered, Marquis trailing along after them. Through +thousands of rapidly-moving men the lads followed the officer, and at +last, after more than an hour's walk, came to a stop, upon command, in +front of a large, bewhiskered man, of imposing military stature. + +"This," said the officer who had conducted them, "is Grand Duke +Nicholas." + +The officer looked down on them. + +"What is it?" he demanded gruffly. + +The officer repeated the story the boys had told him. The Grand Duke +grew greatly interested as the story progressed, and, when the message +was mentioned, he interrupted. + +"Enough," he said. "I have been expecting such a message." He turned to +the two lads. "Do you bear it?" he asked. + +Hal bowed in assent. + +"Then give it to me!" he cried eagerly. + +Chester reached in his pocket, and a moment more the Grand Duke eagerly +clutched the paper the lad handed him--a paper they had gone through so +much to deliver. + +The Grand Duke read the message through twice, sitting on his horse +without a move, his face a perfect blank. Then he thrust it into his +pocket and turned once more to the two lads. + +"You have done well," he said. "Captain, you will see that they are +brought to my quarters to-night at eight o'clock. I desire to question +them. In the meantime, see that they are fed and clothed properly, for +it is very cold." + +The officer saluted, and the Grand Duke rode away, closely followed by +the members of his staff. At a sign from the officer in whose charge +they had been left, the lads followed him. + +Toward the rear of the army they continued their way, coming at last +upon a row of tents. Into one of these the officer led the way, the lads +and the dog following him. + +Here the officer quickly set out food, and the boys fell to with a will, +for it was a long time since a morsel had passed their lips. Then, +having satisfied their appetites, they informed the officer that they +would like to rest. + +The officer nodded, and showed them into another tent, where two bunks +had been prepared. With a word of thanks, the boys climbed in, and the +officer left them alone. + +"Well," said Chester, "we have accomplished our mission successfully. +What are we going to do now?" + +"I have been thinking," Hal replied, "of how life on this side of the +war arena would go." + +"You mean stay here and not return to France?" asked Chester. + +"Exactly. I have read that the Russian Cossacks are terrible fighters. I +would like to see some of them in action." + +"And so would I," declared Chester. + +"All right," said Hal. "Then, if you are agreeable, when we see the +Grand Duke to-night, I shall ask him if he cannot arrange to assign us +to duties with the Russian army." + +In another moment the two lads, tired out, were fast asleep, with +Marquis on guard. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +UNDER THE BEAR. + + +"So, Your Excellency," Hal concluded, "you may see that we have had +considerable active service." + +The Russian Grand Duke Nicholas did not reply for some moments. It was +plain that he was greatly impressed, as he had been greatly interested +in the boys' adventures since they had taken service with the Allies +just before the defense of Liège. + +"Yes," he said at length, "you certainly have seen considerable service; +and, in bringing me this paper safely"--the Grand Duke tapped his breast +pocket--"you have rendered an invaluable service to our cause. I am +indeed glad to know you. Now, if there is anything I can do to show my +appreciation, you may consider it done." + +Remembering their conversation of a few hours before, Hal started to +speak, then hesitated. Realizing that the lad had something he felt a +delicacy of saying, the Grand Duke said: + +"Come, out with it. What can I do for you?" + +"Well, Your Excellency," said Hal, "my friend and I would like to see +service with the Russian army." + +"What!" exclaimed the Grand Duke. + +"Yes," Chester broke into the conversation. "We have talked it over, and +we have decided that we would like to see service in the Eastern theater +of war." + +"Hm-m-m," said the Duke, stroking his mustache, "and have you picked out +the branch of the service to which you would like to be attached?" + +"Yes, sir," said Hal; "we have." + +"And that is?" questioned the Grand Duke. + +"The cavalry, Your Excellency--the Cossacks." + +The Grand Duke jumped to his feet in surprise. + +"Well, well!" he exclaimed. "You have certainly picked out the most +difficult thing you could have asked me. Still, I have no doubt it can +be arranged." + +"If it will inconvenience you, your Excellency----" Chester began. + +"Tut! Tut!" the Grand Duke interrupted him, with a wave of his hand. "It +shall be done. Consider the matter settled. Do you know anything of the +Cossacks?" + +"Why, yes, Your Excellency," replied Hal. "We have read considerable +about them." + +"Still," said the Grand Duke, "I'll warrant you do not know overly much +about them. I'll tell you a little, if you like." + +"We would be glad to hear Your Excellency," said Chester. + +"The Cossacks," said the Grand Duke, "from whom the Russian cavalry is +mainly drawn, form a community within the Russian Empire enjoying +special rights and privileges in return for military service. Each +Cossack village holds its land as a commune, and the village assembly +fixes local taxation and elects the local judges. It has been estimated +that the Cossacks will place 400,000 armed men in the field in this war. + +"Both in historical writings and in fiction the Cossacks are often +represented as little better than savages. But this is a mistake, for +the level of education among the Cossacks is higher than in the rest of +Russia. + +"Now, the Cossacks have always been fighters--none better in the world. +They have won renown wherever they have fought by their daring and +bravery. But the Cossacks, to a certain degree, are clannish--they do +not take kindly to those not of their kind. Which is the reason, as I +said, you had made it hard for me when you asked to be assigned to a +Cossack regiment. By the way, can you ride?" + +"Yes, Your Excellency," replied Hal. "We are both used to the saddle, +having ridden much in America." + +"Well," said the Grand Duke, "I will see that it is arranged. Report to +me here in the morning." + +The lads saluted and took their departure, returning to the spot where +they had sought rest only a few short hours before. + +It was about seven o'clock the following morning when they again stood +in the presence of the Grand Duke. With him was an officer in a dark +uniform, that gave evidence of having seen hard service, but gaily +bedecked nevertheless. He was a large man, fully six feet in height, and +built proportionately. The Grand Duke motioned the boys to approach. + +"This," he said, indicating the officer who stood beside him, "is your +future commander, General Ivan Jorvitch. I have informed him of your +request, and my command that it be granted." + +The lads saluted the general, and he acknowledged the salute stiffly. + +"I am not at all sure as to how they will be received by the men, sir," +he said to the Grand Duke. + +"You will see that they are well treated," replied the Grand Duke. "My +commands are not to be treated lightly. These lads will be attached to +your staff with the rank of lieutenants. They are not to serve in the +ranks." + +"Yes, your excellency," said the general, saluting. + +"You will find, general," continued the Grand Duke, "that you may depend +upon them to the limit. I fancy I am a good judge of character. They +have already done me an invaluable service. They may do more." + +The Grand Duke then proceeded to relate some of the lads' exploits and +informed the general of the message they had brought. + +General Jorvitch thawed immediately upon hearing this, and extended a +hand to each lad in turn. + +"I shall be glad to have you with me," he told them sincerely. "I +feared, at first, that the Grand Duke was trying an experiment." + +In spite of the general's first gruffness the lads had taken a liking to +him. Straight and erect, with a flashing eye, he was the beau ideal of a +soldier. Still, there was a slight twinkle in the corner of those same +eyes, which proclaimed him a man, though stern, of a kindly disposition. + +The lads thanked the general, and their interview with the Grand Duke +concluded, followed their new commander back to his quarters. + +"I have been ordered to advance," the general informed them as they made +their way along, "and as soon as I have introduced you to your fellow +officers and procured you uniforms and horses, we shall proceed." + +An hour later, in true Russian garb and astride two fiery chargers, the +lads made their way forward with the rest of the troop. In all there +were probably 10,000 Cossacks in this advance. + +With one of the Cossack officers, a young lieutenant, huge in stature +and pleasant of face, the lads at once struck up a friendship. He stood +at least six feet six and seemed a Goliath in strength. He it was who +picked their horses for them, and obtained their uniforms. Some of the +other officers, while not openly hostile, still were disdainful of the +two boys, and plainly not well pleased with their company. + +"Have you any idea where we are bound?" asked Hal in German of their new +friend, who introduced himself with a swagger as "Lieutenant Alexis +Vergoff." + +"Lodz; and when we get there we'll make the Germans hard to find," was +the answer, made in a loud, boasting tone. + +Hal and Chester glanced at each other and smiled quizzically. The same +thought was in the mind of each: "He talks too boastfully to be much of +a fighter." + +Alexis noticed the interchange of glances, and the quizzical smiles. He +realized their meaning in an instant. + +"You think I won't fight, eh?" he said loudly. "Alexis Vergoff not +fight? Ho! Ho!" + +He threw back his head and laughed loudly. The boys were not impressed. + +"Worse and more of it," thought Hal to himself. + +Chester was of the same opinion, but he did not say so aloud. + +"Why," continued Alexis, "I've fought more battles than you will ever +hear of. I have killed twenty men." + +"Twenty is a good many," said Hal softly. + +"True! True!" shouted Alexis, "but I'll kill twenty more in the next +battle, just to show you. You shall see what sort of a man Alexis +Vergoff is!" + +"I am afraid we shall see too soon," muttered Chester to himself. + +"Why," went on Alexis, "it was only a month ago, before being ordered to +the front, that I slew five men single-handed!" + +"Great Scott!" muttered Hal. "I wish I had not started him. He'll never +let up now." + +"It was at my mother's home," continued Alexis. "I reached home +unexpectedly. Five men had surrounded her and threatened to kill her +unless she gave them money she kept in the house. One had drawn a knife +just as I entered the room. No one saw me enter, and I was upon them +before they knew it. + +"I picked up the man with the knife as though he had been a child, and +threw him bodily upon the other four. He had no time to strike at me +with his knife or even drop it. The other four went down in a heap. The +knife of the first man was buried in one of his companions, and so there +were only three who could stagger to their feet. I picked up a lamp that +stood on the table. This I hurled at another. It struck him squarely on +the head, and rebounded against the head of another. Both men went down +with cracked skulls. The fifth man turned to flee, but picking up a +knife, I hurled it after him. It stuck in his back, and he ran half a +mile before he fell down dead. The next man jumped for me----" + +"Hold on!" said Hal, laughing. "You said there were only five, and you +have already killed them." + +"True!" muttered Alexis, though in no wise taken aback. "It was in +another fight where I killed six men. I always get them mixed up. In +that fight----" + +"Save that for another time," said Hal, restraining his laughter with +difficulty. + +"Don't you want to hear it?" demanded Alexis in surprise. "I always like +to hear a story of a good fight." + +"I believe you would rather tell one," replied Hal. + +Alexis looked very much crestfallen. + +"Do you think I made that up?" he asked in consternation. "Why, I can +tell you of other fights I have had that----" + +"I don't doubt it at all," said Hal. "I am willing to admit that you can +draw the long bow to the Queen's taste." + +"Draw the long bow?" repeated Alexis, puzzled. "What do you mean?" + +"It wouldn't do for me to tell you," replied Hal chuckling to himself. +"Ask someone else." + +Alexis turned to Chester. + +"Do you know what he means? Will you tell me?" he asked. + +"Yes, I know what he means," replied Chester, laughing, "and I believe +he is right. However, it wouldn't do for me to tell you either. You must +ask someone else." + +Alexis turned to the man on his right, and repeated his question. The +man acknowledged he knew no more what the expression meant than Alexis +himself. + +Alexis accosted several other officers, but with no better luck. He +turned to Hal aggrieved. + +"You should not have said that unless you tell me what you mean," he +said. + +"Ask Colonel Bluekoff, perhaps he may tell you," said Hal. + +Alexis approached the Colonel. + +"What is it, sir?" asked the latter. + +"Colonel," said Alexis, saluting, "can you tell me what drawing the long +bow means?" + +The colonel looked at him in amazement. Then he said sternly: + +"Get back to your place, sir. This is no time for joking." + +Alexis returned to his place. + +"Did he tell you?" asked Hal. + +"No," replied Alexis, "but I'll find out, if I have to put off killing +one of my enemies to ask him about it." + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +LODZ. + + +There came a sudden command from Colonel Bluekoff, and the regiment to +which Hal and Chester were attached galloped forward. The advance guard +could be seen falling back, firing as they retreated upon the main body +of cavalry. They had encountered a force of the enemy. + +With Colonel Bluekoff leading, his sword whirling about his head, the +troop dashed forward at a charge. As they went by, the retreating +advance guard reformed and also dashed forward with them. From ahead +came several puffs of smoke and the cracking of rifles, and here and +there a man fell to the ground. But the rest dashed on. + +The Cossacks did not fire a shot and soon the enemy had disappeared in +the distance. + +"A reconnoitering force that must have gotten around Lodz in some way," +Colonel Bluekoff told his officers. + +The regiment now fell back upon the main body. + +"That's two more," said Alexis complacently to Hal and Chester. + +"Two more what?" demanded Hal. + +"Two more of the enemy I have killed," said Alexis without a suspicion +of a smile. "Didn't you see them go down when I fired?" + +"I didn't know we fired a shot," said Chester, with a laugh. + +"Sh-h-h," whispered Alexis, "do you want to get me into trouble?" + +"Trouble," said Chester. "What do you mean?" + +"Don't you know I'd get into trouble if the colonel knew I had fired +without orders, even though I killed two of the enemy." + +"Great Scott!" muttered Hal to himself. "He is the limit." + +Alexis showed his revolver to Hal and Chester. + +"Little invention of my own," he said. "Now I'll leave it to you, you +didn't hear me when I fired, did you?" + +"No," said Chester emphatically, "I did not." + +"I knew it," exclaimed Alexis triumphantly. "You see," he explained, +patting the revolver, "that's how I was able to kill two of the enemy +without you hearing the sound of my revolver. Little invention of my +own. No noise, no smoke." + +Hal stretched out a hand. + +"Let me have a look at that wonderful weapon," he said. + +Alexis drew back, and returned the revolver quickly to its place. + +"No," he said seriously. "I wouldn't trust it out of my own hand. If +it's not handled just right, it might get out of commission, and I don't +believe I could make another like it." + +Hal whistled softly to himself. + +"He's the best I ever heard," he said to himself, "and I've heard a +whole lot of 'em at one time or another." + +Alexis rode ahead as complacently as before, whistling softly to +himself, pausing once just long enough to turn to Hal and ask: + +"Have you decided yet to tell me what you mean by drawing the long bow?" + +"While you have a gun like that in your possession, I wouldn't tell you +for the world," replied Hal. + +Now the column, at a command from General Jorvitch, increased its pace. +In the distance could be made out the buildings of a large town. + +"Lodz," said Alexis briefly, pointing ahead. + +Hal and Chester acknowledged they understood. The troop continued +onward. + +Lodz, an important railroad center, was one of the most important towns +in Poland, and the Grand Duke had decided that it must be held at all +hazards. There was already a large body of troops stationed there, but +the Grand Duke had not considered them sufficient to hold off the +ever-increasing horde of the Kaiser. Even now large masses of infantry +were being thrown forward to reënforce the troops already there. + +Acclaimed on all hands, the Cossacks rode rapidly through the town and +went into camp at the side facing the Germans. Outposts were thrown out +and the Cossacks sat down to a day of waiting. + +Having secured permission, Hal, Chester and Alexis walked back toward +the town. For several hours they strolled about, looking in the windows, +and purchasing several small articles. + +The people of Lodz were serene in their belief that there was no danger +of a German invasion, in spite of the nearness of the foe. Shops and +stores, theaters and all buildings were gaily decorated, and thousands +promenaded the streets. The city was in festival attire. + +"Looks like they were preparing for a celebration," Hal remarked to +Chester. + +"I should say it does," the latter returned. "But it wouldn't take the +Germans long to wreck the town, if they once got here. You remember +Louvain?" + +"Well, they won't get here," Alexis broke in. "One Cossack is always +good for ten Germans. Why, I remember----" + +"Tell us later," Hal interrupted. "We want to look about a little now." + +The three entered a store, where, Alexis' eye having been caught by a +red necktie, the Cossack purchased it. The necktie in his pocket, he +leaned over the counter and asked the salesman: + +"Say, what does drawing the long bow mean?" + +Hal and Chester burst into a loud guffaw, and the salesman, drawing +back, suddenly turned and disappeared. + +A man in civilian garb, who stood nearby, also broke into a loud guffaw. +Alexis turned on him angrily. + +"What are you laughing at?" he demanded. + +"Why, I'm laughing at you," replied the man calmly. "What about it?" + +Plainly Alexis was astonished at this reply. He drew back. + +"Oh, I guess it's all right," he said pleasantly. "I wasn't sure, that's +all." + +"And who are these children you have with you?" demanded the man. + +Hal answered this question himself. + +"None of your business," he said shortly. + +"Is that so?" said the man, stepping forward. "What if I should make it +some of my business?" + +Hal smiled. + +"I don't think you will," he said quietly. + +The man, large, though somewhat stout, with a red, evil-looking face, +stepped quickly forward, and tapped Hal lightly on the cheek with his +hand. + +"Let that teach you not to talk back to your elders," he said. + +"And let that teach you not to interfere in other people's business," +said Hal, also taking a step forward, and tapping his opponent lightly +on the cheek. + +The man grew very angry, and his face turned a dull red. He raised his +cane, and struck sharply at Hal. But Hal was not there, and a moment +later the man received a sharp jolt on the jaw as Hal's fist went home. + +The man let out a string of epithets and rushed at the boy. But the +latter was prepared for him, and drove him back with straight rights and +lefts; one blow brought a tiny stream of blood from the man's nose. + +He drew back. + +"You will answer for that," he said quietly, and turning, walked off. + +Hal shrugged his shoulders, and at that moment the salesman whom Alexis +had frightened a few moments before came back. + +"Do you know who that was?" he asked of Hal. + +"No," replied the lad, "and what's more, I don't care." + +"Well," said the salesman, "the man whom you just struck is Count de +Reslau, and he is very influential. You have made a bad enemy." + +"I don't care if he is the King of Poland," replied Hal. "No man can hit +me and get away without a return blow." + +Alexis, meanwhile, had been gazing at Hal in astonishment. Now he +approached and laid a hand on the lad's arm. + +"A real fighter!" he exclaimed. "A man after my own heart!" + +"I didn't see you doing much fighting just a moment ago," said Hal, +somewhat nettled. + +"Of course not," replied Alexis. "Do you think I wanted to get in +trouble? Suppose an officer had come along?" + +"Well," said Hal, "suppose he had?" + +"If he had, we would have lost our liberty for all time to come." + +"And is that why you didn't fight?" + +"Yes! Discipline in the Russian army is more strict than in any army in +the world; but you are certainly a fighter. The way you stood up to that +man reminds me of the time I----" + +"Come on," broke in Chester, not wanting to hear any more bluster, "and +let's get out of here." + +The three left the store, and continued their stroll about the town. As +they were passing an unfrequented corner, six men suddenly sprang out +upon them, armed with clubs and knives. + +Hal and Chester immediately backed up against a wall, and turned to +fight off their assailants; but not so Alexis. + +With a loud shout he rushed upon the six who had attacked them. Right +and left flew his huge fists, striking out blindly. One man toppled to +the ground. A stabbing wrist was caught in the Cossack's great hand, and +thrown twisting through the air. And at the same time Alexis called to +Hal and Chester: + +"Now you shall see how Alexis can fight!" + +But Hal and Chester had no mind to let Alexis fight the whole crowd of +assailants. They sprang to his aid. + +Alexis drove his right fist, with tremendous power behind it, right into +the face of the second man, and the latter went down to rise no more for +some time to come. + +Hal, with a sudden spring, clinched with one of the assailants, and the +two went tumbling to the ground. Chester and another of the enemy were +also rolling on the ground. + +Alexis reached one huge hand and grasped another of the foe by the back +of the neck, and lifted him, kicking and struggling, from his feet. The +last man turned to flee, but he had reckoned without the giant Cossack. + +Still holding one man by the scruff of the neck, the Cossack took a step +forward and, with his free hand, grasped the last man by the back of the +neck also. Then, holding one in either hand, he walked calmly to where +Hal and his opponent were engaged. + +Hal was uppermost, and Alexis, seizing a chance when the lad's head was +out of the way, dashed the man he held in his left hand, headfirst, +against the head of the enemy on the ground. There was a crunch, and +both men lay still. + +Then, with his other victim in his left hand, Alexis walked over to +where Chester and his opponent were rolling about, and performed a +similar operation. Then he lent each lad a hand in getting to his feet, +after which he turned and surveyed the field of battle. + +"Six!" he said briefly. "That's enough for one day. Come on! Let's get +away from here before some officer comes along and sees us." + +Both boys looked at the giant Cossack with amazement written large upon +their faces. From the first time that he had boasted to them, they had +put him down as anything but a fighter, in spite of his huge size. But +the quickness with which he had disposed of six men showed them that +they had been wrong. + +As they walked along, it was plain to the lads that something was +troubling Alexis; and at last Hal was moved to ask: + +"What's the matter, Alexis?" + +The huge Cossack looked at the lad for a moment, and then said: + +"There is no use my telling you, but I will. I want to know what you +meant by 'drawing the long bow.'" + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +ALEXIS IN BATTLE. + + +Both lads laughed heartily. + +"You'll learn before many days," said Hal, "and I am not as sure as I +was about it." + +"Nor I," agreed Chester. + +The three made their way back to their posts, where Alexis immediately +insisted on donning his new red necktie. Marquis, who had been left +behind while the three friends made a tour of the city, greeted them +with joyful barks. He had made friends with the big Cossack, and the +latter had taken quite a fancy to the dog. + +Hardly had the three retired to their positions, when an air of +excitement throughout the troops became apparent. There was bustle and +some slight confusion and shouted commands. A moment later and a body of +5,000 Cossacks, armed and spurred, stood beside their horses, ready to +mount and ride at the command. + +"Where do you suppose we are going?" asked Hal of Chester. + +"Haven't any idea," was the reply, "but it looks as though there was a +little fighting to be done." + +"That's what!" exclaimed Alexis, who stood beside the two lads. "Now you +shall see how we handle the Germans." + +"Mount!" came the command. + +As one man, the troop sprang to the saddle. + +"Forward!" came the next order, and the Cossacks started forward at a +gallop. + +Good riders themselves, Hal and Chester could not but envy the riding +prowess of their companions. Accounted among the best riders in the +world, the Cossacks who now dashed forward hurled themselves toward the +enemy with reckless abandon. Their lances held high in one hand, each +brandished a large revolver in his other. The bridles lay across the +horses' necks, the riders guiding their mounts by the pressure of their +knees. + +And so they swept forward, dashing swiftly over the few miles of open +ground toward the spot where the Germans were known to be entrenched. + +The enemy greeted them with a hail of bullets, but they faltered not. +Men fell and horses dropped, but there was no hesitation among those +left. + +Now a bugle sounded, and they dashed on with greater ferocity than +before. + +Squadrons of German cavalry issued forth to meet them. They crashed with +a terrible shock. The impact was terrific, and horses and riders on both +sides reeled back. + +But the Cossacks were the first to recover, and they spurred their +horses into the thick of the enemy. The sweep of their lances and the +fire from their automatics were deadly. There was no pause in the +Russian attack. + +Cutting and slashing, the squadron to which Hal, Chester and Alexis were +attached was soon in the midst of the foe. Not unused to such +encounters, the lads nevertheless found themselves hard put to keep +their seats and ward off the blows of their foes. + +But with each moment they gained confidence, and finally were fighting +with the best of them. Hal caught a descending lance on his upraised +sword, and raising his revolver took a snap shot at his opponent. The +latter threw his arms high, and toppled from his horse. Chester, by a +quick move, escaped a revolver shot aimed at him by a German officer, +and the lad's own weapon spoke sharply. His aim was true, and the German +dropped. + +Now the Germans began to give ground. It was impossible to stand in the +face of the terrible Cossack charge. The Russians pressed the retreating +foe closely. + +But now new forces of Germans dashed forward to drive back the Cossacks, +or at least to protect the retreat of their companions. + +The Cossacks dashed into these fresh troops with the same abandon they +had first charged. But this time the result was different. Tired by the +furious work, they were thrown back by the German reënforcements, and in +spite of heroic efforts, were forced to retire slowly. + +Flushed with this success, the Germans pressed on. The fighting was man +to man, horse to horse, and hand to hand. Not for once had Alexis left +the side of the two lads and none of the three had so far been injured, +although men dropped on all sides of them. + +Suddenly there came a command from Colonel Bluekoff. + +"Charge!" he cried. + +Immediately the squadron to which the lads were attached hurled itself +forward once more, right into the thickest of the fray, in the face of +overwhelming numbers. They dashed forward with the fury of madmen, +shouting and yelling as they charged. + +For a moment the Germans gave back, so terrible was the charge of this +mere handful of Cossacks, but for a moment only; then they came on +again. From all sides they bore down on the squadron, now completely cut +off from the main body of troops, seeking to annihilate them. + +There was no order to surrender from the German commander, nor would one +have been heeded for the matter of that. At a quick command, the +Cossacks formed a little square, back to back, and awaited the attack of +the enemy. + +It came upon the instant. Upon the Russian horsemen the Germans hurled +themselves bravely, cutting and shooting as they came on. The Cossacks +gave blow for blow, and in spite of the fierce charge, maintained their +unbroken front, though men fell here and there. Unable to pierce this +line of steel, the Germans drew off. + +Given this little breathing space, Hal and Chester, standing side by +side, took in the scene about them. Of the little troop of Cossacks +there remained now possibly a hundred men. Their support, the lads could +see, desperately engaged elsewhere, would be unable to come to their +assistance. It was up to them to fight it out alone. + +Colonel Bluekoff was down, having been pierced a few moments before by a +German bullet. Among these few men there were, besides Alexis, but two +minor officers unharmed. At that moment Alexis himself took command. + +His sword raised aloft, he turned flashing eyes upon his men. + +"Will we surrender?" he shouted, and answered his own question: "No!" + +A wild cheer from his men was the reply. The huge Cossack turned to the +two lads. + +"We will fight till the last," he said calmly. "Are you with us?" + +"We are," said Hal simply. + +"You bet!" Chester agreed. + +"Good!" exclaimed Alexis. + +He turned once more toward the enemy, who, it was evident, were +preparing for another attack upon the little band. The latter stood +quietly, awaiting the charge; and in a moment it came. + +Urging their horses on at a gallop, the Germans came rapidly forward. +There was the clash of steel on steel as the enemy hurled themselves +upon three sides of the little square simultaneously. Russians and +Germans dropped together, fighting till the last. + +But the odds against them were too great. Dense masses of the Germans +swooped down upon them, engulfing them, overpowering them. Hal, engaged +with a big German officer, had just succeeded in parrying a thrust of +the other's sword, when someone from behind struck him a heavy blow over +the head. The lad fell from his horse without a sound. + +Chester, seeing his friend fall, fought his way toward Hal. He was just +about to leap from his horse by his chum's side, when a tall German +trooper brought the flat of his sword down on the lad's head. Chester +also went hurtling to the ground. + +And now Alexis, with a few remaining men, was left to fight the enemy +alone. His sword whirling around his head in great sweeps, and an empty +revolver clutched tightly in his left hand; his teeth bared in a snarl +and his eyes flashing angrily, this great Cossack stood off his foes. + +Four men sprang upon him at once. Putting spurs to his horse, the giant +dashed in between them. Two he cut down with lightning-like slashes of +his sword, and a third he disposed of by hurling his empty revolver +squarely into his face. The sword of the fourth pierced him through the +left arm, but before the German could regain his balance after this +thrust, Alexis' sweeping sword had laid him low also. + +The giant Cossack was now the last of his troop in condition to fight. +Suddenly his horse staggered, and went to its knees. With a quick move, +Alexis freed himself and leaped from the saddle just as the animal, +dying from a pistol wound in its head, toppled to the ground. + +Alexis leaped up lightly and turned again to face his foes. + +A German officer urged his horse forward, seeking to ride him down. As +the horse approached, Alexis fell on one knee, and the horse, pierced by +his sword, fell to the ground. The officer leaped from the animal's +back, but before he could bring his revolver to bear upon Alexis, the +latter had pierced him through with a thrust of his sword. + +A dozen of the enemy sprang upon him. With his sword sweeping around his +head, seeming to make a circle of fire, the great Cossack held them at +bay. One ventured to spring at him, and without even stopping the whirl +of his weapon, Alexis dropped him at his feet. + +More Germans sprang to the attack--ten, twenty, thirty of them. +Hopelessly outnumbered, and believing that the end was near, Alexis gave +up his defensive tactics and leaped into the very midst of his foes. For +a moment they gave way before him, then closed in again like a pack of +hungry wolves. Here and there the giant's sword darted out and men +dropped beneath its thrust. + +Cutting and thrusting with his dripping sword, and striking out with his +naked fist, Alexis fought on. A sword pierced him through the shoulder, +but the man who had aimed the thrust paid the penalty with his life. Two +men closed in, and as the Cossack struck out at the one on his left with +his fist, the second German seized his sword arm. + +With a roar like that of an angry bull, Alexis gave a mighty wrench, and +the sword came free. At the same moment he felt a sting in his right +arm. A bullet had struck him. The giant scarcely felt his wounds, +although he was bleeding now in a dozen places. Before him, the ground +was full of dark swaying faces. His sword found another human sheath, +and being unable to withdraw it quickly enough to meet another of his +foes, he left it there and turned upon his enemies with his bare hands. + +He snatched a revolver from the ground, and not taking time to aim, +dashed it into the face of the nearest man, and then dashed forward, +hitting out with his naked fists. + +Vaguely he noticed the sameness of the faces about him. A short wiry man +sprang at him, and with a broken sword, stabbed him in the left +shoulder. Alexis caught him by the throat with his right hand, and the +man gave a choking screech as he lifted him clear off the ground. + +As he did so, someone behind him struck him a heavy blow on the head +with the butt of a revolver. With a last furious effort he turned upon +his foes, and dashed the man he held by the throat full into their +faces; fell forward upon the body and, with a great sob, he shuddered +and lay still. + +And there, on the battlefield on the plains of Poland, lay the bodies of +the two American lads and, a short distance away, that of Alexis, the +giant Cossack, their friend. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +MARQUIS. + + +The Russian cavalry, outnumbered by the Germans, had continued to give +ground and the Germans were still in pursuit. But now, from the distance +arose a cloud of dust, and a moment later, in a headlong dash to save +their companions, came a second body of Cossack cavalry, 5,000 strong, +to give battle to the Germans. + +Down they came upon the unprepared Germans, with yells and shouts, their +horses running free. At the same time that part of the first Cossack +body which still remained reformed and sprang forward. + +The Germans turned and fled. + +Then from the trenches came forth columns of infantry, supported by +field batteries, and in a moment these had opened upon the advancing +Russian horsemen; but in spite of this hail of death, the Cossacks did +not falter nor pause. Straight up to the mouth of the field guns they +rode--sabering the gunners right and left--and in a few moments these +had been silenced. + +Then the Cossacks turned their attention to the infantry, which, firing +with machine-like precision and accuracy, dealt havoc to the ranks of +the Russian horsemen and mowed them down. + +Several squadrons of Cossacks dismounted and approached the foe on foot, +and soon the fighting became hand to hand. The standard-bearer suddenly +threw up his hands and fell over backward, the colors fluttering to the +ground. + +A German officer, thinking to capture the flag, jumped forward, and +leaning down laid his hand upon it; but at that moment a hairy, snarling +body sprang forward, straight at the German's throat. The latter +released his hold on the flag and jumped to his feet to ward off the +attack of this strange enemy, which he could not at first make out. + +But this new enemy was not to be shaken off. His teeth found their mark, +and with a cry, the German tumbled to earth. + +The newcomer was Marquis. + +Separated from Hal and Chester, Marquis, though a battle dog, had become +uneasy at their absence and set out to find them. He had advanced with +the second troop of Cossacks, and seeing the dead upon the field, had +been trying to pick out the bodies of the two lads. + +But when the Russian standard-bearer, almost beside him, had been shot +down and the German had leaped for the colors, Marquis had turned from +the search of his friends to dispose of his lifelong enemy. + +As Marquis' foe went to the ground, a second German sprang forward and, +aiming a kick at the dog, also stooped and started to raise the colors. +Marquis, disregarding the kick, seized upon the flag with his teeth at +the same moment. + +Then came a tug of war. Snarling, and with bristling back, Marquis +pulled at the standard. Crying out hoarse epithets, the German pulled +also; but neither made any headway. + +Realizing that the dog was a match for him, the German uttered a fierce +imprecation, dropped his hold on the flag, stepped back and aimed his +revolver. + +But the dog was ready for him. He had released his hold upon the flag +almost as soon as had the German, and his canine reasoning told him the +German's object. Before the German could pull the trigger, Marquis was +ready for him, and hurled his body straight at the German's throat. + +He had gauged the distance accurately enough, and beneath the shock the +officer was hurled to the ground. He attempted to fight off his +four-footed assailant, but he was no match for the angry dog. + +This adversary disposed of, Marquis calmly returned to the flag, picked +it up in his mouth, carried it to the commander of the squadron and put +it in his hand. The commander took the time to pat Marquis on the head, +and utter some words of praise. + +But Marquis had no time to listen to these. He had other work to do, and +had disappeared almost before the Cossack ceased speaking. + +Hither and thither over the field of battle Marquis made his way, +sniffing the bodies of the dead, and licking the faces of the wounded. +For an hour he wandered about, and at last his search was rewarded. + +From near him came a feeble moan. Marquis pricked up his ears. Surely he +recognized that voice. The moan came again. Marquis hesitated no longer. +He had recognized the voice of Hal. Quickly he sprang to where the lad +lay and poked his cold muzzle into the boy's face. + +Hal turned feebly on his side and put out a hand before he realized what +had touched him. Then he succeeded in raising himself on one arm and +threw the other around Marquis' neck. + +"Marquis!" he almost sobbed. "Where is Chester?" + +Apparently the dog understood his question, for he jumped away and began +nosing other bodies nearby. And at last he came upon Chester. The latter +also was returning to consciousness. With some difficulty Hal staggered +to his feet and made his way to his friend's side. He turned to Marquis. + +"Get some water!" he commanded, and paused to see if the dog understood. + +Marquis bounded away, and returned a few moments later with a +well-filled canteen, in his mouth. Hastily Hal removed the stopper and +poured some of the water down Chester's throat. Then he took a drink +himself. + +Thus refreshed, Chester sat up and looked around. Hal did the same. It +was indeed a terrible sight that met their eyes. As far as they could +see, bodies of dead and wounded men lay scattered about. Hal shuddered. + +"Terrible!" he exclaimed. Then: "I wonder where Alexis is?" He turned to +Marquis. "Find Alexis," he commanded. + +Marquis understood and trotted away. Chester and Hal now arose and +walked slowly after him. At last Marquis, some distance away, set up a +loud bark. Hal and Chester approached as rapidly as their exhausted +condition would permit. + +Marquis was standing directly over the body of the giant Cossack, +surrounded by a circle of the enemies whom Alexis had slain in combat. + +The giant stirred slightly as the boys approached. Quickly Hal bent over +him and, raising his head upon his knee, placed the canteen to his lips. + +This brought a sigh from Alexis' lips, and soon he sat up and looked +around. + +"Well," said he, waving his arm toward the circle of his fallen foes, +"you can see what a Cossack does when he fights." + +"I see," said Hal briefly. "But come, if you are able to walk. We had +better get away from this spot. The battle is not over." + +Alexis objected. + +"What, a Cossack run!" he demanded. + +"But if we stay here we shall probably be killed," replied Chester. +"See," pointing, "even now the Cossacks are retreating in the face of +superior numbers. We must go." + +"I don't----" began Alexis, but Hal interrupted him. + +"Come on," he said, taking him by the arm. "Let's move away from here." + +Grumbling and protesting, the giant allowed himself to be led toward the +head of the Cossack line, now some distance back. Bullets and shells +were still whistling overhead, for the three were between the opposing +forces. None dropped near them, however, and they continued on their +way. + +Suddenly, from the German line, came the clear call of a bugle. + +"Quick!" shouted Hal, hurrying forward. "The Germans are going to +charge. We mustn't be caught in between." + +But it was too late. Even as the lad spoke, the German cavalry came +forward with a rush. + +Hal realized in an instant that they would not have time to rejoin the +main body of Cossacks, for should the latter advance to meet the charge, +they would not do so rapidly enough to come up to them before the +Germans. Should the Cossacks retreat, the three could not possibly hope +to come up with them. + +Fortunately the three were at the extreme east of the battle line; so +now, turning quickly, Hal led the way out of danger. When far enough +away so that there was little likelihood of being struck by stray +bullets, they halted to witness the progress of the battle. + +The Cossacks advanced to meet the charge of the German cavalry, and +threw it back upon its infantry support, which once more issued from the +trenches. German field guns were unlimbered and hurled their shells +screeching at the Russians. The latter were forced to retreat. + +The Germans pushed this advantage closely. + +"If we only had infantry or artillery here," groaned Alexis, "there +would be a different story to tell." + +"I'm sure of that," replied Hal; "but to advance in the face of such +overwhelming numbers would be foolish." + +"True," said Alexis, "but I never like to see a Cossack run from his +foes, no matter what their number." + +It was plain now that the Russian commander realized the futility of +further fighting with his vastly superior foe. The Cossacks gave way +more rapidly and finally turned and began their retreat upon Lodz. + +"And here we are right in the middle of the Germans," said Chester. +"What are we going to do?" + +"We'll have to try to get back to our lines," said Hal, "and the sooner +we start the better." + +"Good," said Chester. "Let's start at once." + +Alexis had so far recovered now as to announce that he was feeling +"perfectly fit," and making a slight detour, the three friends, closely +followed by Marquis, set out. + +They had progressed possibly half a mile, when Marquis suddenly began to +growl. + +"What do you suppose is the matter with him?" demanded Chester. + +"I don't know," replied Hal. "Evidently he scents some kind of danger." +He turned to the dog. "What is it, Marquis?" he demanded. + +Marquis' only answer was a series of deep growls. + +"Germans?" asked Hal. + +Marquis uttered a short bark. + +"That's what's the matter," said Hal, quietly. + +At that moment there came riding down a nearby road a troop of German +cavalry. + +"Quick! down on the ground!" cried Hal. "Perhaps they won't see us!" + +He suited the action to the word, and Chester and Alexis followed his +example. + +But it was too late. The Germans had espied them and now came toward +them at a gallop. Alexis rose to his feet and stretched. + +"Another fight," he said. "Good!" + +"Fight nothing!" exclaimed Hal. "It's impossible. They have us. That's +all there is about it. We shall have to submit." + +The Germans came to a sudden halt a few feet away, and rifles were +brought to bear upon the three friends. + +"You are our prisoners!" called the German commander. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +GERMANY'S NAPOLEON. + + +Hal raised his hands in token of surrender. + +"There is no help for it," he said to his two friends in an undertone. + +The German commander motioned the three to approach. They did so. + +"You will each climb up behind one of my men," ordered the German +leader. + +Hal and Chester did as ordered, but when Alexis approached one of the +German horsemen the latter eyed him dubiously. + +"Man!" he exclaimed. "You can't ride with me. You would break this horse +in two." + +The officer turned to the soldier. + +"Give your horse to the prisoner," he commanded, "and you climb up +behind the man nearest you." + +The soldier did as commanded, and a moment later Alexis also was in the +saddle. Then the little troop got under way again, headed for the German +lines. + +There was no conversation as the little troop rode along, and at length +they were well inside the German trenches. Here, after some delay, the +three prisoners were conducted before General von Hindenburg, the Teuton +commander in the East, a man of kindly face and courteous bearing, the +man whose successes, brief though they were, earned him the name of "The +German Napoleon." + +"How comes it," asked General von Hindenburg of Hal, "that you two +American lads are fighting with the Russians? How comes it that two lads +born and reared in a civilized country have espoused the cause of the +barbarians?" + +"In the first place," answered Hal boldly, "I do not consider the +Russians barbarians. In the next place, we joined the Allies when the +Germans ravaged Belgium." + +"Ravaged!" exclaimed the German commander with some heat. + +"Exactly," said Hal. "We joined the Belgian army before Liège, and we +hold commissions in the Belgian army. We were also attached for a time +to the British forces under Sir John French. We bore communications from +Sir John French to Grand Duke Nicholas, that is how we happen to be +here." + +"And how did you carry these dispatches, may I ask?" inquired General +von Hindenburg. + +"By airship," replied Hal briefly. + +"What!" cried the general. "You flew over Germany in an airship?" + +"Well, only part of it," replied Hal with a grin; and seeing no harm, he +told the German commander of their adventures after being captured and +taken to Berlin. + +"You are brave lads," said the general calmly, when Hal had finished. "I +would that Germany had more like you. But I fear your fighting days are +over." + +"What will you do with us, General?" asked Chester, who up to this time +had remained silent, Hal usually acting as spokesman when there was +explaining to be done. + +"You will be sent to Posen," replied the general, "where you will be +detained until after the war." + +"But that may be for years, General," protested Hal, trying to draw the +general out. + +In this he was successful. + +"You are mistaken," replied General von Hindenburg calmly. "The war will +be over within the next six months. Germany will have conquered." + +Hal did not reply, for he had no mind to antagonize the general; but he +had his own ideas as to the ultimate outcome of the war. + +The general now summoned one of his staff, and turned the lads over to +the latter with this injunction: + +"Have them sent to Posen. Instruct Commander Friech that they must be +well guarded, but treated with kindness." + +He bowed gravely to both lads, who saluted and followed the other +officer from the German commander's quarters. + +"You will remain in my quarters until to-night," said the officer to the +three friends, "and you probably will start on your journey about +midnight. There is a detachment leaving about that time." + +He conducted the three and the dog to his tent, where their wounds were +dressed and a guard was stationed over them. Then they were left to +themselves. + +Alexis, who up to this time had not spoken, at last opened his mouth. + +"What's this all about?" he demanded. "I can't understand this +outlandish gibberish. What's it all about, anyhow?" + +The conversation between the lads and the German officers had been in +English. + +Chester broke into a laugh. + +"Outlandish gibberish!" he exclaimed. "Why, Alexis, if you only knew how +your native tongue sounds, you wouldn't call anything gibberish. It's +fortunate you speak German." + +"Well, perhaps so," Alexis agreed. "But what's it all about?" + +"Simply," said Hal, "that we are to be taken to Posen, where we will be +held prisoners till after the war." + +Alexis uttered a loud Russian imprecation. + +"I was in hope," he said, "that when I went into East Prussia it would +be as part of an army too big for the Germans ever to drive out." + +"It can't be helped now," said Chester briefly. + +"It would have been helped if you had let me fight when I wanted to," +said the big Cossack regretfully. + +All day long the three were kept close inside the tent. Not once were +they permitted to step into the open. Night fell, and food was placed +before them. They were almost famished, so they ate heartily, sharing +their meal with Marquis. It was well along toward midnight when the +German officer once more entered the tent and informed them it was time +for them to leave. + +They followed the officer into the open air, where a large body of men +were ready to move. Quickly they were led to horses, and were soon in +the saddle. Then, closely guarded, they were led away at a swift trot. + +The German camp was some miles from the nearest railroad station, and it +took several hours to cover this distance. At last, however, they were +conducted aboard a train, where, under heavy guard, they continued their +journey. + +It was well along toward the next evening when the train, after many +stops, finally pulled into Posen. With a number of other prisoners, the +three friends and Marquis, who had been allowed to accompany them, were +taken from the train and turned over to another squad of troops. In the +center of these they were led to a large and massive castle at one end +of the town. Here they were thrust into a dark though well-appointed +room, which, their guard informed them, was to be their prison. + +"So this is where we are to spend the next few years, eh?" said Chester. + +"The outlook is not very bright," replied Hal, "but we shall have to +make the best of a bad situation." + +The three began a careful survey of their prison. There were two large +windows in the room, looking out into a little court. Through these a +dim light streamed. The windows were heavily barred. Hal and Chester +tested the bars. Alexis, however, after one look, sat down in deep +disgust. If his wounds bothered him any, he did not seem to mind them. + +"No chance of escape here," said Hal, after shaking one of the heavy +iron bars. + +"I should say not," agreed Chester, after making a test. + +They turned from the windows just as a key grated in the lock of the +heavy door, and a man of huge stature, topping the giant frame of Alexis +by more than an inch, entered the room. + +"Good evening," he said politely enough. "I have come to see if you +require anything. We have been instructed to treat you kindly." + +"A little liberty is about all," said Hal, with a rueful smile. + +"I am sorry," replied the newcomer, also smiling slightly, "but that is +the one thing I cannot grant you. I suppose you wonder who I am?" + +The boys nodded. + +"I," said the newcomer, striking himself a hard blow on the chest, "am +Freiderich von Bernstrum, brother of Heinrich von Bernstrum, commander +of this fortress, and I am kept cooped up here while there is fighting +to be done--me, Freiderich von Bernstrum, a real fighter!" + +"Hm-m-m," muttered Hal to himself as he glanced keenly at Alexis. "Two +of a kind." + +Alexis moved restlessly as the big German made this boast. It was plain +to both lads that, while he might like to brag himself, he did not +relish hearing another do so. + +"Yes," continued von Bernstrum, "I would go to the front. But my +brother, he would stay here. You see," and the talkative German leaned +closer to the lads, "he has a fair captive in the tower above, and he +seeks to marry her." + +"And who is she?" demanded Hal. + +"I will mention no names," replied the German. "Enough that she is a +Russian countess." + +Alexis jumped to his feet and advanced upon the big German. + +"You have dared to lay a hand upon a Russian lady?" he demanded. + +The German eyed him amusedly. + +"And what of it?" he demanded. "However, you need have no fear. She +prefers me, and I shall take her away from him." + +Alexis raised a threatening hand, but Hal stayed him. + +"Quiet," he whispered. "Some good may come of this if you obey me." + +Alexis subsided. + +Hal approached Chester and whispered. + +"Keep von Bernstrum in conversation while I have a word with Alexis." + +Chester did as Hal ordered, and the latter whispered to the big Cossack: + +"Do you think you can whip this man?" pointing to von Bernstrum. + +Alexis' fingers twitched. + +"Remember you are wounded, Alexis." + +"Try me," he said simply. + +"Keep quiet, then, and do as I tell you," said Hal. + +He turned again to von Bernstrum. + +"I can see," he said, "that the lady would be pleased to know a man like +you." + +"Ah! you see it?" cried the German. "But Heinrich is so cunning. Now if +I had your help----" + +"What would you have us do?" asked Hal. + +The big German was silent for some minutes before replying. + +"If I had your help," he said at length, "I would see that you all +regained your liberty. Will you help me?" + +"What is it you would have us do?" asked Chester. + +"I will not say until you have promised," said von Bernstrum. + +"And we will not promise till you have told us," said Hal. "How do we +know that you are a man of your word, or that you are a fighter, such as +you would have us believe." + +"What! Freiderich von Bernstrum not a fighter!" exclaimed the big German +in surprise. + +"We have only your word for it," said Hal quietly. + +Von Bernstrum paced up and down excitedly. He stopped suddenly. + +"Let me bring swords!" he exclaimed, "and you shall see whether I can +fight!" + +He made as if to leave the room. + +"Not so fast!" exclaimed Hal. "The clash of steel would bring the whole +fortress down on us. But I shall try you out." + +"How?" exclaimed the German eagerly. + +"Alexis!" called Hal. + +The big Cossack approached. + +"Here," said Hal to the German, pointing to Alexis, "is a foeman worthy +of your steel. You shall try with him." + +"Good!" exclaimed von Bernstrum. "With fists?" + +"No," replied Hal, who was somewhat doubtful of Alexis' prowess in the +fistic art. "How about a wrestling match?" + +"Good!" exclaimed von Bernstrum again. "But I assure you I am his +superior." He turned to Alexis. "Get ready, man!" + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +THE ESCAPE. + + +Alexis made ready. + +Hal realized that he was taking a desperate chance to put through the +scheme that had entered his mind. Not only was von Bernstrum a bigger +man than Alexis, but the latter had lost much blood only 36 hours +before. Doubtless also he knew every trick of a wrestler or fighter. + +Alexis took off his shoes and threw them into a corner, and divested +himself of his coat. Von Bernstrum growled like a dog as he followed the +Cossack's example. + +Alexis held out his hand. Von Bernstrum gripped it hard and gave a grunt +of satisfaction. + +"A man's hand," he exclaimed. + +Alexis placed his right hand across the German's shoulders and caught +him firmly and the boys saw by the expression on his face that he was +not certain of the outcome. The German had not boasted in vain. He was +indeed a giant. + +"If ever men felt the joy of battle, these two do," exclaimed Hal to +Chester. + +The two men were now gripped in a tight embrace. Von Bernstrum felt +Alexis over carefully, but gave him no opening. + +"A man's chest," he grunted. + +Alexis so far had uttered no word. Now he perceived that his opponent +was preparing for the loin throw and prepared himself to meet it. When +he had foiled this attack, he held his opponent for a moment at a +disadvantage. + +Alexis gripped von Bernstrum for a hug. Had the German been a weaker +man, his ribs must have cracked; but he had caught deep breath, and the +Cossack might as well have tried to crush a tree. + +"A good try!" muttered the German. + +He now tested Alexis sorely. He tried a cross hitch, but failed. At +this, a smile broke out on Alexis' face. + +Both lads, who had been watching the struggle nervously, now grew +confident. It was evident that the Cossack hoped for victory. + +At last Alexis saw his chance. In getting the grip he wanted, it was +necessary for him to face the danger of putting himself in his +opponent's power; but the Cossack ventured to do this, for he realized +that by no other means could he throw him. Von Bernstrum saw his +opponent's move and took advantage of it, and for a moment Alexis was +afraid it was all over with him. + +But he still held his ground. Von Bernstrum's grip grew weaker at last, +and the boys could hear him panting like a dog. Hal spoke to Chester. + +"I believe he realizes that Alexis will master him," he exclaimed in a +whisper. + +Chester nodded in assent. + +Now Alexis put all the strength of his mighty shoulders, back and loins +into a mighty heave, and Freiderich von Bernstrum, giant though he was, +went flying across the room, his head striking the floor with a terrible +thud. + +For a moment the lads were afraid Alexis had killed him; but for a +moment only. Calmly Alexis put on his shoes and donned his coat. Then he +turned to his young friends and waited. His attitude said as plain as +words: + +"I have done the fighting. You do the rest." + +Quickly Hal stooped over the fallen man and took a bunch of keys from +his pocket. Then, straightening up, he approached the door, opened it +and peered out. There was no one in sight. + +Hal turned to Alexis. + +"Change clothes with him," he whispered, motioning to the fallen German. + +Hastily Alexis obeyed. In spite of the fact that von Bernstrum was +almost two inches taller than Alexis, the height of the latter was so +great that Hal believed the difference would not be noticed. + +The lad now relieved von Bernstrum of his revolvers. Alexis had donned +his adversary's sword with his uniform. Then once more Hal approached +the door and peered out. Then he spoke to Alexis. + +"We will go with you as though we were your prisoners," he explained. +"If anyone accosts us, we may have to fight. However, I believe you look +enough like von Bernstrum to avoid detection. Pull the hat well over +your face, and if anyone asks where you are going, reply that you are +taking the prisoners to the commandant. Do you understand?" + +Alexis signified that he did, and quietly the three, still followed by +Marquis, left the room. Along the same passageways they had traversed +Hal guided Alexis by a touch of the hand, for the lad's sense of +direction was much better than that of the giant Cossack. + +At last they came into the open and started toward the gate. So far they +had not been accosted. At the gate a soldier approached Alexis and +saluted. + +"Are you going out, sir?" he demanded. + +"Yes," replied the Cossack, mimicking von Bernstrum's voice as best he +could. "These prisoners have given me their parole, and I am taking them +out for a breath of air. Get me two more horses." + +The soldier saluted and turned away. Hal addressed Alexis. + +"You are doing beautifully," he exclaimed. "I didn't know you were such +a strategist." + +"Why," exclaimed Alexis, "next to being a fighter I am a strategist. I +remember one time----" + +"Save it for some other time," said Hal. + +"If you don't believe----" began the big Cossack, somewhat crestfallen. + +"Never mind now," broke in Chester. "We have other things to do." + +Alexis subsided, grumbling. A few moments later the soldier reappeared +leading three horses. Alexis took all three bridles, and bade the +soldier begone, which order the latter obeyed in a hurry. + +Quickly the three friends leaped into the saddle, and started off at a +rapid trot, riding eastward. Out of sight of the town, they bore off +slightly to the North, for, as Hal said, they did not wish to run right +into the German army advancing on Lodz. + +They had proceeded perhaps a mile out of sight of the castle, when Hal +suddenly checked his mount, and raised a warning hand. All stopped to +listen. From the direction in which they had just come, came the +frenzied tolling of a great bell, followed by a few faint shots. + +"They have learned of our escape," said Hal quietly. "That, I imagine, +is a warning to the countryside to be on the lookout for us." + +All three put spurs to their horses, and set off again at a gallop. For +two hours they kept up this swift pace, and then Alexis drew rein. + +"Unless I want this horse to drop under me," he said, "we shall have to +slow down. There is no horse living that can carry me at that gait very +long." + +The boys did not doubt this, and they continued their journey at a more +leisurely pace. Finally, rounding a turn in the road, they came upon a +little stream, perhaps a hundred yards wide. There was no bridge. + +"Guess we shall have to make our horses swim it," said Chester. + +Accordingly all plunged into the stream, Marquis swimming behind, and +soon reached the opposite shore. Here they drew up in a clump of bushes +and sat down to dry off a bit. + +"Do you suppose they know which way we came?" asked Hal of Chester. + +"I don't know. However, I suppose they will search in all directions, +and they are bound to come upon us sooner or later if we linger around +here." + +"You are right. I guess we had better move." + +Soon the little party was in the saddle again, and making off at a rapid +trot. Hal, for some unaccountable reason turning suddenly in his saddle, +uttered an ejaculation. + +"What's the matter?" demanded Chester. + +"Look!" said Hal, pointing back toward the little stream. + +Alexis and Chester followed the direction of Hal's finger. Just plunging +into the stream were half a dozen horsemen, and it was plain from that +distance that they were German soldiers, and that they had made out the +forms of the fugitives. + +The three friends put spurs to their horses and, with Marquis loping +along behind, soon lost themselves in a little woods. Here they urged +their tired horses on, and at last came to a small open space. This they +crossed before Alexis' horse gave out and went to the ground in a heap. + +"I am afraid it's all off," exclaimed Hal. "How far do you suppose we +are from the German border, Alexis?" + +"Not far," answered the Cossack. "Besides, some of our troops have been +operating in these parts. They were only small detachments, and most of +them have been driven off; but even now there may be some of them near." + +Alexis urged the two lads to ride on and leave him, but this they +refused to do. Therefore they dismounted and, turning their horses +loose, they continued their journey on foot. + +As they walked along a man suddenly popped out from among the trees, +brought his revolver to bear upon the trio, and in a loud tone cried: + +"Halt!" + +Alexis gave one quick glance at the man's uniform, uttered a cry of +pleasure and spoke a few quick words in his native tongue. The lads were +surprised to see the man drop his rifle, throw his arms about Alexis and +embrace him. + +For some moments after quitting this embrace the two talked in Russian, +the lads being able to pick up only a few words. Then Alexis turned to +the two lads. + +"My brother," he said simply. "He belongs to a detachment of Cossacks +who raided in these parts two weeks ago. The detachment was surrounded +by Germans, he tells me, and practically annihilated. About 150 men +escaped to the woods, where they have been conducting a guerilla +warfare, picking off the Germans one at a time, wherever they happen to +find one alone, or in pairs, or small parties. These Cossacks are +scattered all through the woods, and to get them together would be +almost impossible." + +"Then how are they able to tell friend from foe?" + +"You see that large green leaf my brother wears in his hat?" + +"Yes." + +"That is their emblem." + +Alexis' brother approached and spoke in German. + +"Come," he said. "I shall show you something." + +He led the way into the woods, and approached a large tree, where he +pointed to a placard tacked on it. The placard read: + +"All Russians at large in these woods are ordered to assemble at this +spot the 10th of this month without arms and surrender, under penalty of +death." + +"That was posted two weeks ago," said Alexis' brother, "and this is the +20th. Read our answer below it." + +The answer read: + +"Come and take us!" + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +GUERILLA WARFARE. + + +"Do you mean?" asked Hal, "that 150 men, at large in these woods, have +defied the whole German army?" + +"There are less than a hundred now," replied the brother of Alexis, +whose name the lads learned was Stephan. "We have been conducting this +guerilla warfare for more than two weeks now, and we have done +inestimable harm to the Germans. We have evaded large bodies of troops +sent out to kill or capture us. Of course, some of our men have been +picked off, but we are not going to run yet." + +"But how do you live?" demanded Chester. + +"We have been living on roots and herbs," was the reply, "and such other +food as we have been able to take from the enemy." + +"And where do you sleep?" + +"This forest," said Stephan, "makes an ideal hiding place. It is filled +with large caves, the presence of which seems to be unknown to the foe. +Many of the caves are large enough for twenty men, although it is seldom +that there are more than five or six men in one at a time." + +From the rear came the sound of galloping horses. Stephan sprang to +instant action. + +"Come with me," he cried, and led the way into the very thick of the +forest. + +Hal, Chester, Alexis and Marquis followed him and soon were safe from +discovery in a large cave, the mouth of which was screened from view by +a dense mass of shrubbery. + +Outside, after a few minutes, the lads could hear the sounds of moving +horses and the exclamations of their riders. The horsemen halted near +the entrance to the cave and held a consultation. + +"They have probably fallen in with some of these guerillas," said one +voice. "If so, we shall have hard work to find them." + +Close upon his words came a scream from outside, and straining their +ears, the party inside made out the sound of a distant pistol shot. + +"One more gone," said Stephan briefly. + +There came a volley from outside the cave, as the Germans fired at their +unseen assailant. + +"Not much chance of their hitting anybody," said Stephan calmly. + +From outside the cave came the sound of rapidly retreating hoofbeats. +The Germans were moving away. Alexis, having thus quickly learned the +way of the guerillas, cautiously poked his head from the cave, reached +back and picked up his brother's rifle, and fired after the retreating +foe. + +"Another one," he said grimly, returning the weapon to Stephan. + +"Just how long do you suppose you can keep this work up?" Chester asked +of Stephan. + +"Not much longer, I am afraid," was the reply. "I figure it is only a +question of days now until the Germans send out a force strong enough to +search the woods thoroughly. In that event, we shall try to make our way +back over the border to safety." + +From a corner of the cave Stephan now produced a small quantity of food, +which he set out. All fell to and it was soon disposed of. Then they +ventured from the cave and, walking slowly, made their way northward. + +"It's just a case of keep moving," Stephan explained. "Of course, it +might be possible for us to join forces, but then we should greatly +lessen our effectiveness." + +Alexis, who was in front, stopped suddenly and threw up a warning hand. +Immediately the other three halted in their tracks. Peering in the +direction in which Alexis pointed, they made out the forms of half a +dozen German soldiers standing near a tree. Directly, however, the +latter made off, and the little party approached the tree. + +"Another placard, eh?" muttered Stephan, as he drew near. + +The other three also approached and read: + +"The time for surrender has been extended till to-morrow at noon!" + +Angrily, Stephan snatched the placard from the tree. Turning, he saw +several other trees also bearing placards. These he also tore down. + +"Surrender, eh!" he cried. "Never!" + +Suddenly he clapped his hand to his side and staggered back. At the same +instant, from directly ahead, came the sharp crack of a rifle. But +Stephan did not fall. Recovering himself, he dashed straight in the +direction of the shot at top speed. There came the second crack of a +rifle, but still the Cossack did not pause. + +Now Hal, and Chester, dashing after him with Alexis at their side, saw +Stephan pause momentarily, raise his rifle and fire quickly twice. Then +he dropped to the ground. But it was not from injury, as the others +feared, for at that moment there came a volley and bullets whistled +overhead. Quickly Hal, Chester and Alexis also flung themselves to the +earth. + +Stephan, lying upon his stomach, was pumping lead steadily straight +before him. Hal, Chester and Alexis drew their revolvers and joined in +the fray. Through the trees they could now make out the number of their +assailants. There were an even dozen of them, all lying in a little +clearing, their rifles trained upon the spot where the four friends lay. + +Under the deadly aim of Stephan's rifle, two men dropped to the ground. +The others returned the Cossack's fire, but the latter was well +protected by foliage, and escaped injury. Another German jumped to his +feet, spun round on his heel, and fell to the ground. + +Then, at a word from one of the Germans, the remaining nine jumped +suddenly to their feet and dashed toward their enemies on a dead run, +their rifles spitting fire as they came on. Exposed to the fire of the +foe as they were, they realized that their only chance of life lay in +rushing their opponents. + +Alexis was the first to see the danger in this attack. He jumped to his +feet, dragging Hal and Chester with him. Stephan also was up in an +instant. + +"Quick!" cried Alexis, and at a rapid run, he urged the lads to another +secluded spot. + +There, as the Germans appeared in the spot where they had stood a few +moments before, Stephan, the only one of the four armed with a rifle, +fired three more quick shots at the foe. One tumbled forward on his +face, and a second dropped his rifle. + +And now unexpected aid came to the four friends. From the rear of the +Germans came several rifle shots in quick succession, and two more of +the enemy bit the dust. As they turned to face this new attack, Stephan +stepped forward and opened on them again. Caught thus between two fires, +the Germans fought well, firing blindly at their unseen foes on both +sides. + +But such a struggle could have but one ending. The Cossacks, screened +from the fire of the enemy who lay between them, were practically safe +from the German fire, at the same time having the Germans at their +mercy. No quarter was asked, nor none was given. Soon a heap of fallen +bodies marked the spot where the Germans had made their last stand. + +From the other side of the Germans, two Cossacks now stepped forth, and +approached. Stephan advanced to meet them. Alexis made his way to the +fallen foe, and gathered up the rifles. Returning, he passed one to each +lad, with the remark: + +"Here; these beat revolvers for this kind of warfare." + +After a short conference with the two newcomers, Stephan motioned for +his friends to follow, and the party, now increased to six, moved on. +For perhaps half an hour they marched through the woods, and at the end +of that time stopped once more before the entrance to a second cave. + +"Before we enter," said Stephan, "I will tell you that these men have +just informed me that inside a consultation of war is being held. There +are perhaps 60 men there, who have gathered here for that purpose. I +have vouched for you, and you will therefore be admitted to the +consultation without question." + +The others signified that they understood, and Stephan led the way into +the cave. Inside, the lads looked quickly around. This cave, they saw, +was much greater than the first they had entered. Also it showed signs +of human handiwork. Large pillars ran up through the center of it, and +beyond the far entrance the lads could see one, then two more +compartments. + +Sitting about on the floor of the first compartment were more than half +a hundred men, talking in low tones. They looked up in surprise at the +sight of Hal and Chester, but Alexis they greeted with a nod. The latter +stepped forward and greeted them in their native tongue. The lads could +not make out all he said, but the looks of suspicion on the faces of +some vanished immediately, and they moved a bit to let the newcomers +join the circle. + +Plainly it was the opinion of most of the men that the guerilla warfare +had been carried far enough. Some were in favor of making a last +desperate raid upon the enemy before attempting to get back across the +Russian border, while others were in favor of attempting to get back +immediately. + +For an hour the discussion waged and then it was rudely interrupted. The +man left to guard the entrance to the cavern rushed in. + +"Germans approaching in great force!" he cried. + +Immediately all were on their feet, and one man rushed to the narrow +entrance. He started through but fell back, a bullet in his head. A +second, rifle in hand, also advanced, but Hal, springing quickly to his +feet, stopped him. + +"Wait!" he cried. "They can pick us off one at a time as we go out. Some +other plan will have to be found." + +Stephan and Alexis took their stand by the lad's side, and faced the men +who would have rushed to certain death. + +"The lad is right," said Stephan. "Out the other end of the cave, men, +and scatter!" + +Rapidly this order was obeyed, and soon none were left in the first +compartment but Hal, Chester, Alexis, Stephan and Marquis. + +Now Hal also dashed after the others. But the lad was not bent upon +flight, leaving his friends to face the enemy alone. Quickly he hurried +through the three compartments of the cavern, casting a keen eye here +and there. Clear to the far entrance he went, and then turned back. As +he made his way along, he stumbled over something and fell heavily. He +was up in a moment, however, and glanced curiously at the object over +which he had tripped. Then a smile lighted up his face. He made his way +back to his friends. + +"How many do you suppose there are out there?" asked Alexis. + +"We have no means of telling," replied Chester. "However, there are +probably no less than two or three hundred." + +"If we stand here and fire as they attempt to enter, we may have some +success," said Stephan. + +"Yes," said Alexis, "but the detonations may occasion the falling in of +the cavern. At the first shot from outside a piece of falling rock +grazed my shoulder." + +"We must do something quickly," said Hal. "We cannot leave without +striking at least one blow at them." + +"Assuredly not," agreed Alexis. "I have a plan." + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +THE MIGHT OF ALEXIS. + + +"What is it?" demanded all eagerly. + +"We will retreat to the second compartment," said the giant, "and I will +place myself behind the pillar, which I can see from here." He stooped +and picked up a long heavy iron bar from the ground. "I will have this +for my weapon, and invisible in the darkness, if they come in a rush, I +can let my bar fall upon their skulls thirty times a minute." + +"Good!" cried Hal, "and at the same time I have another plan. The rest +of us shall retreat to the third compartment, leaving Alexis, for the +moment, to deal with the foe alone. But Alexis, when I say retreat, you +must leave your post and come to the third compartment. Is it agreed?" + +"Agreed!" cried the giant. + +"All right, then. To your post!" + +Quickly the four retreated to the second compartment, where Alexis took +up his post behind the large pillar, concealed from view by the +narrowness of the entrance between the compartments themselves. The +others retreated to the third compartment. + +For a long time, it seemed to Alexis, he waited in silence. Then the +head of a man appeared through the entrance to his compartment and came +toward him. There were more heads behind him. + +"Strike, Alexis!" came Hal's voice from the next compartment. + +The giant obeyed. The iron bar rose and fell full upon the head of the +first man, who dropped without a cry. Ten times in almost as many +seconds the huge iron bar rose and fell again and not once did it fail +to find its mark. + +The German soldiers could see nothing; they heard sighs and groans; they +stumbled over dead bodies, but as they did not realize the cause of all +this, they still came forward. So far there had not been a sound to tell +those behind what was transpiring in front. + +But now an officer, bearing a torch, approached. On arriving at the +entrance to the compartment where Alexis had exterminated all that had +come, he drew back in terror; but his retreat was blocked by those +pressing on from behind. The officer saw the heap of dead, but as yet he +had not discerned the cause. + +Suddenly a gigantic hand issued from nowhere and clutched him by the +throat. A second later the captain fell close to the now extinguished +torch, adding another body to the heap of dead. All this was effected as +mysteriously as if by magic. Another officer, unable to account for the +pile of dead, cried to the men behind him: + +"Fire!" + +A volley rang out, and for a moment the cavern was lighted as if by day. +But none was hit. From behind him Alexis now heard the sound of Hal's +voice. + +"Come back quickly!" whispered the lad. + +The giant obeyed instantly, and glided softly through the door to the +third compartment. Hal took him by the arm and led him to the side of +the room, where he showed him the object over which he had stumbled when +in the compartment a few moments before. It was a barrel of powder. + +"Alexis," said Hal, "you will take this barrel, the fuse of which I am +going to light, and hurl it at our enemy. Can you do it?" + +Alexis stooped over the barrel, weighing fully seventy pounds. He lifted +it easily with one hand. + +"Light it," he said briefly. + +"Throw it right in among them," explained Hal. + +"Light it," repeated Alexis. + +Hal did so, and the giant, picking up the barrel, advanced to the door +of the compartment. Beyond he could hear the confused shouts of many +men, as they in vain sought to explain the death of their companions. + +Alexis blew on the fuse, that it might burn quicker. + +And now, by the light of the sparkling fuse, the enemy made out his +form. They saw the barrel he held in his hand; they understood what was +going to happen. + +A cry of terror arose. Some attempted to fly; officers cried out to +Alexis that they would spare him if he would extinguish the fuse. Others +commanded their men to fire; but the latter were too terrified to do so. + +Now the arm of the giant swung round. There passed through the air the +train of fire, like a falling star. The barrel fell into the midst of +the terrified German soldiers. Immediately Alexis dashed for the far end +of the cavern, just outside which his friends now stood. + +Then, from inside the second compartment came the terrible thunder of +the explosion, blowing the cavern to pieces, hurling men to death by the +force of its shock, falling stones crushing out the life of many more. + +Alexis dashed for the open air, where his friends stood awaiting him, a +happy smile on his face at the success of his exploit. Three more paces +and he would be free of the cavern--two more. And right at the exit, a +heavy piece of rock, sent hurling in the air by the explosion, fell upon +him--striking him upon the shoulder--bearing him to the +ground--pinioning him beneath it. + +And at the same instant the walls of the cavern began to give. Chester, +realizing what was happening, sprang into the mouth of the cave, closely +followed by Hal and Stephan. Now, under the massive rock, Alexis +stirred. In spite of the great weight upon him, he turned slowly under +it, until it rested squarely upon his back. Then stretching his hands +out before him, he rose to his knees balancing the rock upon his back. +Then he straightened up, and the rock tumbled from him with a terrible +crash. He turned, and with his friends, dashed from the cave. + +They had not escaped a second too soon. + +There was a terrible rending sound, the crunching of rock against rock, +and slowly the walls of the cavern gave; then fell inward with a fearful +crash. + +Some distance from the cavern the four stopped running. Hal wiped the +moisture from his brow. + +"A close call and no mistake," he said weakly. + +Chester grasped Alexis by the hand. + +"I thought you were done for," he exclaimed. + +Alexis grinned. + +"Can't kill me that way," he said. "What's a little rock like that? It +was play for me to lift it." + +"Maybe so," replied Chester, "but even now, I can scarcely believe what +I saw." + +"Why," said Alexis, "I could have lifted that rock with one hand. It was +child's play. Now I can still remember one great feat I accomplished. It +was in St. Petersburg--Petrograd now, by the grace of God and the Czar. +There is a little stream runs through the city. Over this there is a +bridge. I was passing along one day, when I saw that the bridge, having +been weakened in the middle, was about to fall. Well, there was no one +on it, so that would have been all right. But, dashing down the street +was an ambulance. The woman in it was very ill. It was absolutely +necessary that she be taken across the bridge at once. At the bridge the +driver was held up. The guard would not allow the ambulance to cross. It +was too dangerous. But delay meant death for the lady. I leaped into a +small boat and was quickly under the middle of the bridge. The bridge +was low, and by standing I could just touch it. I put my two hands under +the bridge and braced it while the ambulance crossed. I was sorely +tested, but I held out. I account that one of my greatest feats." + +"And so you should," said Hal dryly. + +"But," demanded Stephan, who was greatly interested in his brother's +wonderful narrative, "how is it, that with all that weight resting upon +you, and you standing in a boat, the boat didn't sink? I can't +understand how, with that weight upon it, it remained afloat." + +"Why," said Alexis with perfect gravity, "I forgot to mention that the +stream was very shallow--in fact it could be waded. The boat was forced +down by the great weight until it rested on the bottom. In that way, it +was perfectly simple." + +"I see," exclaimed Stephan. "A wonderful feat, truly!" + +"Was the bridge made out of rubber?" asked Chester, laughing to himself. + +"Rubber?" repeated Alexis. "No; it was a wooden bridge." + +"Then," said Chester, "how do you account for the fact that it stretched +so when the boat went to the bottom of the stream?" + +"I didn't say it stretched," said Alexis. + +"I know you didn't say so," grinned Chester; "but it must have stretched +unless it broke in two." + +Alexis looked aggrieved. + +"If you don't believe me----" he began. + +"I wouldn't dispute you for the world," said Chester. "I just wondered." + +Alexis would have replied, but at that instant his hat was lifted from +his head, and all four became aware of the distant sound of a shot. +Quickly all dropped to the ground, but they were not quick enough to go +unscathed. A bullet struck Stephan in the arm, and he dropped it to his +side with a cry. + +Instantly Alexis was all anxiety. He jumped to his brother's side. + +"Are you much hurt, Stephan?" he asked tenderly, taking the injured arm +in his hand. + +"Just a scratch," replied Stephan. "I'll be all right." + +Nevertheless Alexis would not rest until he had bound up the wound with +his handkerchief. In the meantime, from their positions on the ground, +the others had been popping away at the enemy. Several rounds of shots +were exchanged but none of the four friends was hit again. The enemy was +so far away that the lads could not tell whether or not their fire was +effective. + +Bullets began to drop closely about them, in their exposed position. +Also they fell oftener now, indicating that the force opposed to them +was numerically superior. + +"Great Scott!" exclaimed Hal, as his hat seemed to leap suddenly from +his head. "We'll have to get away from here. This is too close for +comfort." + +"You bet," said Chester. "Now when I say the word we'll all jump to our +feet and make a dash for those trees in the distance." + +At the word, the four sprang to their feet, and not even waiting to take +a parting shot at the enemy, dashed away as fast as their feet would +carry them. Hal took the lead, and behind him came Stephan, then Alexis +and then Chester. + +When Hal reached the trees, uninjured, he turned to speak to Chester. +What was his amazement and dismay to find that Chester was not there. At +that moment Alexis and Stephan dashed into the shelter. Hal glanced back +over the distance they had come. + +There lay Chester, in the open field. He had been struck down by a +German bullet, and even now the enemy, with a triumphant cry, was +charging down upon him. With a cry, Hal leaped forward, but the iron +hand of Alexis stayed him. + +"You stay here," said the giant. "I'll get him!" + +Discarding his rifle, he dashed forward in the very face of the +onrushing foe. Chester's life hung in the balance! + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +TWO TO THE RESCUE. + + +As friend and foe alike bore down on him, Hal saw Chester raise himself. +He got to his knees, struggled to his feet, staggered, and then fell +back again. + +The Germans rushing toward the lad numbered twenty--Hal counted them. +They were approaching the prostrate form of the lad as rapidly as they +could, afoot. But Alexis was nearer, and it was evident that he would +reach the lad first. + +The giant Cossack covered the intervening space with long bounds, going +at a speed of which Hal had not deemed him capable. + +And now, as he came close to Chester, a second form bounded after him. +There was a flash of a hairy body as Marquis leaped forward and set out +after Alexis. He came up with the latter before he reached Chester, and +they came to the lad's body together. + +In the meantime, Hal and Stephan kept up a steady fire with their +rifles, pouring a hail of bullets in the direction of the advancing +Germans. One man fell, but the others dashed on. + +At this point Hal made a startling discovery. The magazine of his weapon +was empty and he had not another cartridge. At the same moment Stephan +fired his last remaining shot. Hal sprang forward and seized the weapon +Alexis had thrown down when he dashed to Chester's aid. It was empty. +The lad uttered a cry of dismay, and turned his eyes. The two still had +their revolvers, but the distance was too great for a pistol bullet. + +Alexis, having reached Chester's side, knelt and raised the lad's head +to his knee. Hurriedly he drew his canteen and poured a little water +down his throat. Chester looked up into the Cossack's face and smiled +feebly. Alexis tried to place him upon his feet, but the lad was too +weak to stand. + +A fierce growl from Marquis, who had been standing guard over the two, +with bared fangs and bristling back, called Alexis to more serious work. +The Germans, apparently fearing nothing at the hands of one man, a +wounded boy and a dog, had come within fifty feet without firing a shot +at the trio. Now, as they approached closer, the leader of the band +called out: "You are my prisoners!" + +Without waiting to reply, Alexis leaped toward them. His sword flashed +from his scabbard and whirled aloft even as he jumped. He was among the +enemy before they realized what had happened. + +The suddenness of the giant's spring stood him in good stead. Before a +rifle or a revolver could be brought to bear on the huge form, Alexis +had come to such close quarters with his foes as to prevent the use of +firearms. The German leader did draw his revolver, but the mêlée was so +fierce and men were tangled up so that he was unable to fire for fear of +hitting one of his own men. + +To the right, to the left, and straight ahead darted the fiery sword of +the giant Cossack. The Germans gave back before the very savageness of +this attack, but Alexis kept close in among them, for while he was +fighting mad, he was still cool enough to realize that his hope of life +lay in his keeping in the center of the enemy. + +Before the thrust of the angry sword three men fell. The blades of the +others who encircled him hissed above his head, flashed by his side, but +his single weapon so far had formed a perfect barrier. Not a thrust or a +slash had passed it. Ten swords clashed against the giant's blade at +once. With a quick move, he swept them all aside, and with a quick +thrust disposed of another of the enemy. + +With a rapid spring forward he avoided the weapons that would have been +buried in his back by his foes in the rear, and sweeping his sword +around his head with such rapidity that he seemed a circle of fire, for +a moment he cleared a space around him. + +But in that instant the German officer brought his revolver to bear and +fired. + +Alexis had perceived this move out of the tail of his eye and, leaping +straight forward into the midst of the foe once more, escaped the +bullet. + +Whirling his sword about his head, the Cossack spun on his heel. The +guard of the German soldiers was not strong enough to ward off this +terrible blow. Two swords went spinning in the air, and Alexis' weapon, +sweeping through one of the enemy, also cut down another. But again the +Cossack had left an opening for the officer's pistol, and the latter was +not slow to take advantage of it. + +Slowly he raised his weapon and took careful aim. He had determined not +to miss this time. His finger tightened on the trigger, and---- + +Aid came from an unexpected source. + +Marquis, who, up to this instant, had remained alert over Chester, had +not taken a hand in the battle. His eyes fastened at this moment on the +German officer, his canine intelligence told him as clearly as words +that his giant friend stood at death's door. With one fierce growl, he +sprang from Chester's side, and leaped upon the German officer from +behind, even as the latter pressed the trigger. The officer's aim had +been deflected, and the bullet passed over Alexis' head. + +The German turned upon this new assailant with an imprecation. His hand +went to his holster in an attempt to draw his second revolver. But +Marquis was prepared for this move. His teeth met in the officer's hand +and the latter yelled with pain. + +Marquis released his hold and sprang straight at his enemy's throat. The +latter was thrown from his feet by the force of this attack, and in +falling his head came in contact with the sharp barrel of his revolver, +knocking him unconscious. + +Marquis, now having entered the battle, had no thought of leaving Alexis +to fight it out alone. Once in the fight, he was there to stay. He +sprang forward and leaped upon a German soldier who at that moment would +have plunged his sword into Alexis' defenseless back. The man gave a +choking cry as the teeth of the dog found lodgment in the back of his +neck and he was borne to the ground. + +And still the giant Cossack, with herculean strength and unbelievable +prowess, was fighting his assailants. A sword had pierced him through +the left hand, another had scratched his cheek and a third had struck +him in the right shoulder. But still, unmindful of these wounds, he +fought on with the same determination and courage as before. + +Marquis, having dragged the man off his back, Alexis plunged into the +midst of his enemies anew. Two more were pierced through and through by +the quick and mighty thrusts of the powerful arm. Another dropped with a +bleeding head, as Alexis caught him squarely with a quick back-handed +blow just in time to avoid the point of the other's weapon. + +Now there were but eight Germans left, and these leaped quickly +backward, thinking to put enough distance between them to allow them to +draw the revolvers. But Alexis gave them no time for this. Springing +after them as they turned to flee, he cut two more down with mighty +strokes. Then the others scattered. The Cossack sprang after one and +disposed of him before he could draw his pistol, but the others now had +had time to get their guns. + +A bullet struck Alexis in the right shoulder, but he did not even +stagger. He rushed quickly upon one of his enemies, who stood with a +revolver pointed squarely at him, his finger on the trigger. There was a +sharp report, followed instantly by another and the German fell to the +ground with a bullet in his head. Alexis sprang out of the cloud of +smoke unharmed. + +This time the Cossack had been saved from death by the hand of Chester. +The lad having recovered sufficiently to take in the scene about him, +had staggered to his feet, thinking to go to the aid of his companion. +But he was so weak he could not stand. Then, seeing the revolver dropped +by the German officer, he had crawled toward it. At last he reached it, +and he had just time to aim and fire before the man who had drawn a bead +on Alexis could pull the trigger. + +There remained but four Germans on their feet, and these, having +witnessed the mighty prowess of the giant Cossack, turned to flee. But +Alexis was after them in a flash. His blood was up, and though bleeding +in a dozen different places, he had no mind to quit the battle until the +last of his enemies had been laid low. + +But the fleeing Germans, unfortunately for them, had turned their faces +in the wrong direction. Hal and Stephan, who had been struck spellbound +by the terrible fighting of their friend and brother, saw the four men +coming toward them, weapons in hand, with Alexis in hot pursuit. Quickly +they aimed and fired. At this distance a miss was impossible. Two +Germans staggered in their stride, reeled, and dropped over backward. + +The others halted, appalled by the forgotten presence of this new enemy. +The stop was unfortunate for them. Alexis bore down on them like an +avenger, and close on his heels came Marquis. The Germans hesitated, +then started to run. It was too late. + +Alexis' mighty sword cut down one before he had taken a dozen steps. The +other, bewildered, and not knowing which way to turn, threw down his +weapons and raised his hands in token of surrender. + +Alexis, however, did not perceive this move. The light of battle still +flashed in his eyes, and he could see nothing but glittering swords and +shining revolver muzzles. His upraised sword would have split the head +of the German, had not Hal, stepping forward quickly, caught the blow +upon his own weapon. + +"Alexis!" he cried sharply. + +The giant paused and looked around as one in a dream. Then he slowly +raised his sword, gazed at the lad blankly for a few seconds, spun twice +around and fell forward on his face. He had swooned. + +Stephan leaped forward, and from his canteen poured water over the face +of his brother. Knowing that the giant was in good hands, Hal dashed +forward to where Chester still lay, having fallen back after firing the +one shot. The prisoner, now unguarded, took to his heels and was soon +out of range. + +"Are you badly hurt, Chester?" asked Hal, anxiously, bending over his +friend. + +"I feel pretty weak," was Chester's reply. "But I don't believe I am +seriously hurt. A bullet must have grazed my temple, and the force of +the shock put me out. But say! Isn't Alexis a terrible fighter?" + +"I should say he is," answered Hal. "I don't believe anyone ever saw +such fighting before. Certainly not since the days of Hereward." + +Hal assisted Chester to his feet and, supporting him by an encircling +arm, led the way to where even now Alexis, having received first aid +treatment at the hands of his brother, was sitting up and gazing about +somewhat vacantly. + +Chester spoke to the big Cossack. + +"I owe my life to you," he said simply. "I shall never forget it." + +"That's all right," replied Alexis. "I remember now. It was quite a +fight, wasn't it? But I remember once when I was attacked by----" + +His voice died away, and he sank to the ground again. + +His friends bent over him anxiously, and Hal placed a hand over his +heart. It was beating regularly while his deep and regular breathing +proclaimed his condition. + +"He is sleeping," said Hal quietly. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +ON THE VISTULA. + + +"How far are we from the Vistula now, Alexis?" asked Chester, as the +little party rode rapidly forward. + +"Not more than seven or eight versts, I am sure," was the reply. + +"Is it likely the Germans have advanced that far in this section?" + +"There is no telling; we shall have to be careful." + +All day long the four friends had been hurrying toward the Russian +lines. Alexis, after his terrible struggle with overwhelming odds, when +he had dashed forward to save Chester, had slept for hours without +moving-all night, practically. When he awoke, shortly before dawn, he +announced that he was in condition to move on. + +Chester's wound also had benefited by the rest and now bothered him +little. While Alexis and Chester slept, Hal and Stephan had succeeded in +capturing four horses; and so, long before sunrise, the little party +continued their flight, Marquis, as usual, trailing along behind. + +For another hour now the four rode on, and then a welcome sight +confronted them. Hal was the first to perceive water ahead, and called +the attention of the others to it. + +"The Vistula," said Alexis briefly. + +There was not the sign of either friend or foe. For some unaccountable +reason neither bank of the stream was guarded. Hal supplied an +explanation. + +"The Germans have probably been pushed back further to the South," he +suggested, "thereby doing away with the necessity of a patrol here." + +They drew nearer the river. At this point the stream was very deep, and +there was no bridge; but as the four drew up on the bank, Chester made +out a cloud of smoke coming up the stream. + +"A steamer!" he exclaimed. + +The lad was right. The smoke drew nearer, and at last the friends were +able to discern the outline of a small river vessel steaming toward +them. They jumped from their horses, and advanced to the very edge of +the water, where they awaited the approaching boat. + +"She may be a German," said Hal. + +"It is hardly likely," said Alexis. + +"But I understood the Germans had fitted out several river steamers," +said Hal. + +"True," replied Alexis; "I had forgotten. We shall have to be careful." + +But now the vessel was close enough for those on shore to make out her +flag. The emblem flying aloft was that of the Czar. Hal drew off his +coat and waved it about his head. + +"If they will stop and pick us up," he explained, "it may save us a +tedious ride." + +A sharp blast of the whistle signified that Hal's signal had been seen. +The steamer came to a stop in midstream, a launch put off toward the +shore, and soon grounded at the spot where the four friends stood. + +Quickly they leaped into the little craft and were soon aboard the +steamer, where they were greeted by the commander of the vessel. Hal +explained their situation as briefly as possible. + +"Well," said the commander, "I can't promise to put you ashore +immediately, for I am bound further up the river in pursuit of a German +steamer that has been bombarding several upstream towns. When I have +disposed of the enemy, however, I shall be glad to land you down the +stream, for I shall return immediately I have sunk the foe." + +With this the fugitives had to be content. They were assigned quarters +on the steamer, and after washing the dirt and grime from their hands +and faces, they returned on deck, where they made themselves comfortable +as the steamer continued on her way. They passed several little towns +without stopping. + +Suddenly those on deck were brought to their feet by the booming of a +single heavy gun. All strained their ears to listen. The first report +was followed by the sound of others. The commander of the vessel sprang +to action. + +"Full speed ahead!" he cried. + +The steamer leaped forward faster than before. The crew prepared for +action. The guns were made ready and the crews stood to their posts. The +commander, from his position, motioned the four friends toward him. + +"We have run the enemy down," he informed them. "Can I count upon your +services if they are needed?" + +"You may," replied Hal and Chester briefly. + +Alexis and Stephan nodded their heads in assent. + +"Good!" said the commander. "You will stay here near me, then. I shall +not hesitate to call upon you." + +Rounding a slight bend in the river, the Russian steamer came in full +sight of the enemy. So silently had she approached, that the Germans, +engaged in hurling shells upon a little village, did not perceive their +presence until a shell from the Russian plowed up the water under the +prow of their boat. + +As soon as the Germans became aware of the presence of another enemy +they turned to meet it. Their forward guns were quickly trained upon the +Russian steamer and burst into action. The first salvo was harmless, for +the range had not been gauged accurately. + +The Russians were more fortunate with their second fire. A shell burst +squarely upon the deck of the German with a loud explosion. There was a +shower of steel and wood, followed by a cry of triumph from the crew of +the Russian vessel. A second shell carried away the enemy's single +smokestack and a third burst in the muzzle of one of the foe's forward +guns, blowing it to atoms. + +At full speed the Russian advanced, and when within two hundred yards +swung her broadside to the enemy and poured in a rain of shells. The +Germans fought back gamely, but with the first success of the Russians +they seemed to have lost their heads and fired wildly. Their aim was +poor, and the Russians suffered little. + +Having delivered his broadside, the Russian brought his forward guns to +bear and with these he raked the deck of the enemy--fore and aft--with +shot and shell. + +All this time the vessels had been drawing closer together. Now the +German commander, apparently realizing that he was fighting a losing +battle, steamed full speed for the Russian ship. By a hasty maneuver the +Russian commander avoided being run down, but a second later the vessels +crashed broadside to broadside. + +The German vessel stood somewhat higher in the water than did the +Russian craft, and before any aboard the latter realized what was +happening, the foe swarmed down the side onto the Russian vessel. So +sudden and unexpected was their onslaught, that for the moment the +Russians on deck gave way before them; and had it not been for the +presence of mind of Hal and Chester, it is likely the German rush would +have been successful. + +The two lads sprang forward into the very faces of the enemy, their +automatics spitting fire as they leaped. Alexis and Stephan came close +behind them. The very fury of their attack caused the Germans to halt +momentarily, and this gave the Russian sailors time to rally and spring +to their aid. + +Their automatics having been emptied, the lads leaped into the thick of +their foe, striking out with their naked fists. Hal twisted a sword from +the hand of a German officer, and laid about him lustily. Chester, +stooping, came to his feet with a sword in his hand, and joined his +friend in the press. Alexis also possessed himself of a weapon and +rushed forward. + +By this time the Russian sailors had met the foe and the conflict became +general. Slowly the Germans gave way, retreating to the side of the +ship. Then, suddenly, they turned and leaped for their own vessel, which +still lay close, under the guiding hand of the German commander. The +Russians plunged after them, following them to the deck of the German +ship. + +Brought to bay, the Germans turned in a last desperate stand. Releasing +the helm, the German commander himself sprang into the midst of the +struggle. His sword flashed aloft, and two Russian sailors hit the deck, +pierced through and through. He was a big man, this German commander, +and a powerful one. As he pressed fiercely forward, for a moment the +first line of Russians gave way; but at that moment he ran against a +solid obstruction in the form of Alexis. + +They fell to, hand to hand, and on all sides of them the others gave +way. Thrusting and parrying, the two skipped forward and back, each +losing ground and then recovering it. Alexis, by a quick sidestep, +avoided a fierce thrust, and stepped forward to put an end to the +encounter. In his haste he slipped, and slid to the deck. + +With a fierce, guttural cry of satisfaction, the German stepped forward, +raised his sword and would have plunged it into his opponent's breast; +but Alexis was too quick for him. With his bare hand he seized the naked +blade aimed at him and clung to it. In vain did the German try to draw +his sword through the Cossack's hand. Alexis' mighty grip held it +easily. + +Now, putting forth greater exertion, by the aid of the weapon to which +he clung, Alexis dragged himself to his feet. In vain did the German +commander wrench at the sword. He could not free it. He at length gave +up the idea, dropped the sword and leaped back. + +As Alexis, now firm upon his feet once more, took a step forward, the +German commander turned and ran toward a rack of rifles. Alexis did not +take time to reverse the weapon he still held by the point. Raising it +high above his head, he carefully gauged the distance, and let fly. The +sword went hurtling through the air, turning once in its flight. Alexis' +aim was true, and the point of the weapon pierced the German commander +squarely between the shoulder blades. He threw up his hands and fell +forward on his face. + +Alexis turned and surveyed the battle. + +The Germans had been pressed back by the Russians, led by Hal and +Chester, until now they were fighting desperately on the stern of the +vessel. Alexis dashed forward to take part in this fray; but the +Germans, having witnessed the death of their commander, had lost heart. +Perceiving the giant form rushing down upon them, they threw down their +arms as one man. Some turned quickly and leaped overboard into the river +and struck out for the shore, while others stood quietly waiting to be +bound by their captors. The battle was over. + +Immediately the commander of the Russian steamer ordered his men and the +prisoners back aboard his own ship. Then he turned to Hal and Chester. + +"As you have taken such a prominent part in this victory," he said, "I +will allow you to finish the work by blowing up the enemy. You will +attach a fuse to the magazine and then hurry back here, that we may +reach safety before the explosion." + +The two lads saluted, and made their way to the magazine of the German +vessel. Here they quickly attached a fuse, and lighted it. Then they +hurried aboard the Russian steamer, which immediately got under way. One +hundred yards, two hundred yards, three hundred, they steamed from the +doomed vessel; then there came the sound of a muffled explosion, the +German craft burst into a sheet of flame, broke into two pieces, and +settled slowly beneath the waters of the Vistula. + +"A good job done," said the Russian commander briefly. + +He turned once more to the two lads. "I want to say," he added, "that it +has never been my fortune to meet two braver lads. You are English, I +take it?" + +"Americans," replied Hal briefly. + +"So? Still, I might have known it. I have known several Americans, and +they were always cool and brave. Where do you wish to go now?" + +"Well," said Hal, "we would like to get back to Lodz. I suppose our +regiment is still stationed there." + +"I will see that you get there with all possible dispatch," the +commander promised. "I will land you where it will be most convenient +for you." + +The lads thanked him, and walked across the deck, where they rejoined +Alexis and Stephan. + +"You would make a pretty good sailor, Alexis," Chester told him. + +The Cossack drew himself up and strutted proudly for several moments. + +"Of course I would," he said. "It is nothing new to me." + +"Nothing new!" exclaimed Hal in some surprise. + +"No," replied Alexis. + +"You mean you have been a sailor?" demanded Chester. + +"Certainly. Of course the commander of this vessel did a fair piece of +work a few moments ago; but I could tell him a few things. Why, when I +commanded a ship in the battle of----" + +"Enough! Enough!" cried Hal, throwing up his hands in protest. + +"Do you doubt my word?" demanded Alexis fiercely. + +"Not at all," Hal hastened to assure him. "But, Alexis; have you learned +yet what 'drawing the long bow' means?" + +"No," replied the giant, "are you going to tell me at last?" + +"I had about decided to," said Hal slowly; "but after this, never!" + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +INTO THE CARPATHIANS. + + +"So," said the Grand Duke Nicholas, "you find that there are adventures +to be found in the eastern as well as the western theater of war, eh?" + +"Yes, Your Excellency," replied Hal. + +"And tell me," continued the Grand Duke, "what do you think of the +Cossacks as fighters?" + +"From what we have seen," replied Chester, "I should say that there are +none better." + +"Good!" was the emphatic rejoinder. "There are none better!" and he +regarded the lads silently for some moments. + +Hal, Chester, Alexis, Stephan and Marquis, after the battle on the +Vistula, had returned to Lodz without difficulty. The commander of the +Russian river steamer had made it as easy for them as possible. In Lodz +they learned that their regiment had been ordered to the front, and had +been on their way to join it, when the Grand Duke, inspecting his +troops, had come upon them. He immediately had the two lads taken to his +quarters, for he was greatly interested in them. Alexis, Stephan and +Marquis waited without. + +At last the Grand Duke spoke. "I have a mission for you, if you are +willing to undertake it," he said. + +"Yes, Your Excellency," replied Chester. + +"Very good! As you may know, my primary aim, from the beginning of the +war, was an invasion of Hungary--the capture first of Budapest and next +of Vienna. This necessitates the capture of Cracow, in Galicia, and the +forcing of a passage through the Carpathian mountains--a tremendous feat +at this time of year. The investment of Cracow is certain. Even now my +troops are within a few miles of that stronghold, and I had word this +morning that part of it is in flames. Do you follow me?" + +"Perfectly, Your Excellency," replied both lads. + +"Very well! Now, in some unaccountable manner, my plans have always been +anticipated by the Austrians. How or by whom I do not know; but I +believe it has been by some of Brunnoi's bandits, who have a stronghold +in the Carpathians, but mingle freely with our soldiers. Do you know who +Brunnoi is?" + +"No, sir," from both the lads. + +"Well, Brunnoi is a veritable bandit chief--a man of great cunning and +influence, besides being a born gentleman. A Hungarian, and therefore a +Slav, he should naturally support the Russian cause. He has a strong +following and his men would make first-rate soldiers. We are seeking his +support, and so are the Austrians. However, if it is through his spies +that my plans are being given to the Austrians I would like to know it. +Do I make myself clear?" + +"You mean," said Hal, "that you would have us find out just where he +stands?" + +"Exactly! He has sent me word that he will espouse our cause, but I fear +he may be double-dealing. Naturally, therefore, you will keep your +identities secret. That is all." + +The lads saluted, and turned to depart, but before they could leave the +tent a man in civilian garb entered the tent. The Grand Duke greeted him +warmly and then called to the lads. + +"I wish to introduce you to Count de Reslau," he said. "He, if any man, +can give you information that may be of aid to you." + +The two lads acknowledged the introduction, and as he recognized the +newcomer, Hal started back. The latter smiled. + +"I see you remember me," he said pleasantly. "I must apologize for my +previous rudeness. I did not then know you were friends of the Grand +Duke." + +Both lads bowed. Count de Reslau was the man who had laughed at Alexis +in a store in Lodz some time before--the man whom the lads believed to +be responsible for their being set upon in the street. The count +explained the matter to the Grand Duke. + +"Well," said the latter, "I am sure these lads bear no malice." To the +boys he added: "The count is one of my best friends. Being a Hungarian +he has not taken up arms against Hungary, although he is in sympathy +with us. I am sure he can aid you." + +He then gave the count an idea of the mission the lads were about to +undertake, and the count promised to help them in every way possible. + +"Your Excellency," said Hal, as they prepared to take leave of the Grand +Duke, "have we your permission to take Alexis with us?" + +"And who is Alexis?" demanded the Grand Duke. + +Chester explained. + +"Take him by all means," was the Grand Duke's reply; "and return to me +at the earliest possible moment." + +The lads saluted and left the tent. Alexis joined them on the outside +and the boys told him of the work ahead of them. + +"But how about me?" Stephan demanded. "Am I not to go too?" + +"No; I am sorry," replied Hal. "The Grand Duke said nothing about you. +Besides, three are better than four." + +Stephan was greatly disappointed, and showed it plainly. However, he was +not a man to complain. He wished them good luck, shook hands all around +and set off to rejoin his own regiment. + +Suddenly Hal bethought himself of Marquis. + +"We can't take him," he said. "He would be in the way. What shall we do +with him?" + +Alexis bethought himself of a friend in the city who, he was sure, would +be glad to look out for the dog while they were away. Accordingly +Marquis was taken to this home, where the woman of the house readily +agreed to take care of him; but when they came to leave, Marquis wanted +to go, too. + +"No," said Hal, and he talked to the dog quietly for several minutes, +explaining to him the necessity of his remaining behind. + +There could be no doubt that the dog understood, for a sorrowful look +came over his face. His tail wagged in understanding of his orders, but +there was a hurt look in his eyes. However, he did not protest, and when +his three friends finally walked away, he stood looking after them +regretfully, although making no attempt to follow. + +"The first thing," said Hal, "is to procure three good horses." + +"Yes," agreed Alexis, "and another to carry food." + +"No," answered Hal. "We cannot be bothered with that. We shall have to +live off the country." + +Alexis made no objection, though it was plain to both lads that the +Cossack would have rather made due preparations to care for the inner +man. Three strong, wiry Cossack horses having been placed at their +command, the three leaped into the saddles and set off through the +streets of Lodz at a slow trot. + +Darkness was falling when they came to the outskirts of the city, and +turned their heads toward the southwest. As far as Cracow the roads were +held by Russian troops in force, and the three travelers experienced no +difficulties. They did not go close to the beleaguered city, but bore +off a bit to the north, just skirting the great Russian army before the +Galician stronghold. + +Three days and nights they traveled without incident. Their food they +purchased at little towns through which they passed, or at farmhouses; +and they slept wherever they happened to be when night overtook them. +But now that they were drawing close to the Carpathians, Hal decided +that the order of things must be reversed. + +"In the future we shall travel at night," he said. "We'll do our +sleeping in the daytime." + +This plan was approved by both Chester and Alexis, so that the morning +of the fourth day found them approaching the long line of mountains. + +The Carpathian mountains encircle Hungary on three sides, separating it +from Germany on the northwest, from Galicia on the northeast and from +Turkey on the southeast. At the southern extremity of the range, a +branch proceeds in a southerly direction across the Danube to the center +of European Turkey, connecting the Carpathian mountains with the great +eastern branch of the Alps. + +It can readily be seen, therefore, that the Carpathians are much like +the Alps--made up of rugged peaks between which are narrow passes. These +passes furnish the only means of getting across the mountains. + +In their search for Brunnoi, the boys and Alexis were now approaching +that part of the mountains which separates Hungary from Galicia, and +through which there are but three passes; so that their traveling had to +be done slowly and with great care. + +"Now, if you will permit me, I shall take the lead," said Alexis. "I +have been in these parts before. Besides I have been told of certain +landmarks in these foothills which indicate where Brunnoi holds +forth--not definitely enough to lead us straight to him; but I have a +general idea of the direction." + +No objection being offered, Alexis swung into the lead and the horses +plunged up a narrow pass into the midst of the wild hills, probably the +wildest and most desolate spot in all Europe. Great trees and massive +rocks overhung the little pass, making progress extremely difficult. At +the top of the first steep incline, the riders allowed their horses to +stop and rest. Then they fared on again. + +It was nearing daylight when they came upon a small hut, shrouded by +trees, through which a dim light twinkled. + +"We'll wait here until daylight," said Hal, "and when the occupants of +the hut come out we will accost them." + +They waited. Daylight came, and with its coming, a man came from the +hut. Hal approached him, and addressed him in German. The man looked at +him shrewdly, and then answered in the same tongue. + +"Yes," he said, "we can spare you something to eat; also your friends. +May I ask what you are doing in the mountains?" + +"We are trying to make our way to Budapest," replied Hal. "We were +captured by the Russians, and escaped. We are not familiar with the +ground, however, and have met with difficulties." + +"Well," said the man of the hut, "I can set you right. Come." + +Over the meal they talked of the war. Finally Chester said: + +"Is there any truth in the report that Brunnoi will go over to the +Russians?" + +"None!" cried the man, striking the table a hard blow with his fist. "I +know, because I am one of his men." + +"What!" exclaimed Hal, in well simulated surprise, though he had +surmised as much. + +"Yes," said the man quietly. "Brigands, they have called us. But they +will find that when the Russians attempt to cross the Carpathians, as +they surely will, we bandits will give as good an account of ourselves +as will the trained troops. We love our country just as well as do those +who live in Budapest. But tell me, you are not Hungarians nor Austrians, +nor even Germans?" + +"No," said Hal, thankful that they had been wise enough to discard their +uniforms before setting out upon their mission. "We are Americans." + +"Ah!" said the man. "I have heard much of them. And you have been +fighting with the German army?" + +"Yes," said Chester truthfully. + +"But this man," said their host, turning to Alexis. "Is he an American +also?" + +"Yes," replied Hal, and signified for Alexis not to speak, for fear that +his accent might betray him. + +Their host was evidently satisfied. The meal finished, the man walked +with them to the door, and pointed out the direction they were to take. +Then he pointed also to the southwest. + +"In that direction," he said, "lies the home of Brunnoi. No, there is no +truth that he will espouse the Russian cause. Even now he is able to do +much harm to their cause. He is with Austria to the last drop of blood +in him." + +The three took their departure, going in the direction the man had +pointed out. But once out of sight, Hal changed the course, and they +bore off to the southwest for several hours, looking for a place to +secrete themselves for the day. + +"We shall have to be very careful," said Chester. + +The truth of this statement was proved a moment later. From behind came +the sharp crack of a rifle. Chester's hat leaped from his head. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +THE BANDIT CHIEF. + + +Hal, Chester and Alexis threw themselves to the ground with a single +movement. A second bullet sped harmlessly overhead. + +"We didn't come here to fight," Hal whispered to his friends, "so here +goes." + +He drew a handkerchief from his pocket, and waved it aloft. This was +answered by a command in German, from some distance away. + +"Stand up; put your hands above your heads and advance." + +The three friends did as commanded. Three swarthy-faced men, with +leveled revolvers, advanced to meet them. Quickly they searched their +prisoners, relieved them of their weapons, and bound their hands +securely. + +"Forward march," commanded one, poking the muzzle of his weapon into the +small of Chester's back. + +There was no help for it. The three friends obeyed. + +"Where are you taking us?" demanded Hal of one of their captors. + +"To Brunnoi!" came the brief response. + +"Great Scott!" said Hal to Chester, in English. "We certainly couldn't +have got there quicker any other way. You don't suppose he has learned +of our mission." + +"I don't see how that is possible," replied Chester. + +"Nor I; I suppose the thing to do is to try and convince him we are +German soldiers, or else come straight out and tell him who we really +are and why we are here." + +"The latter way might be best," said Chester, thoughtfully. "For Brunnoi +after all may not be such a staunch Austrian supporter as our late host +would have us believe." + +"True," said Hal. "I hadn't thought of that." + +After an hour's ride they came to a little clearing in the forest that +covered this point of the mountain. Here they were ordered to dismount, +and for half a mile proceeded on foot. As they advanced still further +the lads made out the mouth of a huge cavern. Into this dark hole their +captors pushed them. Down the mouth of the cavern they walked, and then +suddenly came to a sharp turn. Ten more paces and they bumped into a +solid wall. One of their captors stepped forward and passed his hand +over the surface of the smooth rock, and it gave way before him, turning +on well-oiled hinges. + +"Great Scott!" muttered Chester. "I have read of these things, but I +never expected to see one." + +The rock fell into place behind them, and the boys saw that they stood +in a well-lighted compartment, in which stood a table and chairs. Their +guards led them further along, to where they perceived a closed door. On +this one of their captors knocked sharply. + +"Come in," came a deep voice from beyond the door. + +One of the guards opened the heavy wooden door, and stood back, +signifying for the prisoners to enter. + +The three friends did so. The room was brilliantly lighted. At a large +mahogany desk sat a man in a military uniform, though of what country or +what his rank the boys could not tell, for they had never seen a similar +uniform and the man wore no shoulder straps. The chairs in the room were +beautifully upholstered, and pictures were hung about the walls. All +this the lads saw at a single glance. + +The man at the desk rose and approached them. He bowed slightly, and, +after ordering their hands released, indicated three nearby chairs. + +"Be seated, if you please," he said politely, at the same time motioning +the guards to withdraw. + +Hal, Chester and Alexis did as requested. There was now no question of +the man's identity in the mind of any. He wore a long white beard and +had a pleasant, kindly face. + +Hal rose to his feet. + +"Are you Brunnoi?" he asked. + +Brunnoi bowed. + +"At your service," he replied. "Now, what can I do for Lieutenants Payne +and Crawford, and their Cossack friend?" + +The lads started to their feet upon hearing their own names thus upon +the lips of a man they did not believe could possibly know them. + +"Come, come, gentlemen," said Brunnoi, smiling at their surprise. "You +see, many things are known to me. For instance, now, I could even tell +you the object of your expedition to these mountains. Is it necessary?" + +Hal threw wide his arms with a gesture of dismay. + +"I guess it is not necessary," he said quietly. + +"Good!" cried Brunnoi, for the first time evincing real interest in the +lad. "You are a man after my own heart. You have nothing to gain by +subterfuge." + +"Well," said Hal slowly. "You know who we are and the object of our +mission. What is your answer? Are you Austrian or Russian? Are you a +Slav or not?" + +Brunnoi jumped to his feet. + +"Yes," he replied, "I am a Slav; but I am not one of your down-trodden +Russian Slavs. I am a Hungarian, and a Hungarian--a true +Hungarian--to-day is an Austrian!" + +"Then," said Hal calmly, "our mission is accomplished. We know where you +stand. May I ask you a question?" + +"Certainly." + +"Is it true that you have been able to furnish the Austrian general +staff with the Grand Duke Nicholas' plans?" + +Brunnoi was silent for some moments, but at length he replied: + +"I don't mind answering that question, for you will never repeat my +answer to the Grand Duke. Yes, I have furnished the Austrian general +staff with important information." + +"Well," said Chester, breaking into the conversation, "what are you +going to do with us?" + +"Why," said Brunnoi, "for the present you shall be kept here as my +guests--prisoners, if you prefer. After that--well, it all depends. +Should the Russians come, it may be necessary to dispose of you. +Therefore, you should be wise and pray for Austrian success." + +"Surely you do not mean that you would murder us?" asked Hal. + +"I call it by no such name," replied Brunnoi calmly. "Putting away an +enemy is not murder." + +"Very well," said Chester calmly. "I suppose there is no use talking +about it." + +"Not the slightest. Come! Follow me, and I shall show you where you will +make your home." + +The bandit chief arose from his chair and led the way into another +compartment. Hal, Chester and Alexis followed him. This room was also +fitted up comfortably, though not as pretentiously as the bandit's +office. There were several beds in the room. + +"You may make yourselves comfortable here," said Brunnoi. "The door will +be always locked, but that need not interfere with your comfort." + +He bowed and left the room, and the three prisoners heard the key turn +in the lock behind him. + +"It looks to me as though we are in a bad way this time, all right," +said Chester, when they were left alone. + +"A bad way is no name for it," replied Hal; "but tell me, Chester, did +you notice anything familiar about Brunnoi?" + +Chester clapped his hands together. + +"By Jove!" he exclaimed. "Now that you mention it, it seems to me I have +seen him some place before. But I can't place him." + +"Nor I; but I am positive this is not the first time we have met. It is +his voice that puzzles me." + +In vain the boys racked their brains. Alexis was called into +consultation. He also had been impressed by Brunnoi's likeness to some +one he had seen before; but he was unable to throw any light upon the +resemblance. + +"Well," said Chester at length, "I can't place him and that's all there +is about it. Nevertheless, I am absolutely certain I have met him some +place before to-day." + +The door to their prison was now opened and food was placed upon the +table in the center of the room. All three were nearly famished, and +they fell to with a will. + +"Fattening us up for the slaughter," said Chester with a laugh. +"However, I guess they won't kill us to-day." + +Slowly the hours passed. There was not a single window or opening in the +room, and the prisoners could not tell whether it was day or night +outside. But now Hal, glancing at his watch, uttered an exclamation of +surprise. + +"Almost midnight," he said. "Guess we might as well turn in." + +Hal and Chester tumbled into the beds, but Alexis continued to sit in +his chair, brooding. + +"Come on, Alexis, get to bed," Hal called. "What on earth's the matter, +anyhow?" + +Alexis did not reply, and Hal repeated his question. + +"I was just thinking," said the giant, "what a fool I was to let these +fellows take my gun away from me without even a struggle. With a good +gun apiece, we might be able to get away from here." + +"Cheer up," said Hal. "We are not going to be killed. While there is +life there is hope. We'll get out of this ticklish situation somehow. +Just be patient." + +"Patient!" echoed Alexis; "how can a man be patient cooped up in a place +like this?" + +"Well, it can't be helped now," said Chester. "Come on to bed." + +But Alexis was in no mood to turn in. For perhaps another half-hour he +sat brooding; then he arose and made a tour of the room. He put his hand +on the doorknob and tried it. It was securely locked, and the Cossack +had no doubt that it was also bolted on the far side. He rattled the +knob angrily, but there was no answer from the outside. + +Alexis continued his tour of inspection. He eyed the table +speculatively. It was made of oak and while not of great bulk was very +heavy--as much as two ordinary men could lift. Alexis picked it up and +tested its weight. Then he growled something to himself. + +He also tested the chairs and even the bed on which he was to sleep, all +the time growling to himself like a dog. Then, his tour of the room +completed, he sat down in his chair again. Hal and Chester had been +watching him from beneath lowered lids. + +Hal raised himself up. + +"Find anything?" he asked. + +Alexis vouchsafed no reply. + +"Great Scott!" cried Chester, sitting up. "Are you going to mope around +all night? Come to bed and get a little rest, that you may be fit to +meet any emergency should it arise." + +"A good idea," growled Alexis to himself, and extinguishing the light, +threw himself upon his bed. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +GETTING AWAY. + + +All were up long before a guard appeared with breakfast. This they ate +leisurely and then sat down to talk their predicament over calmly. + +"There must be some way of getting out of here," said Chester. + +"Yes," agreed Hal; "and if we are fond of life, I believe we had better +get away soon. But what can we do?" + +"You leave this to me," growled Alexis. "I have it all figured out and +when the time comes, we will go." + +"What!" exclaimed Chester. "You have found a way out?" + +"Yes," replied the giant briefly. + +"Then----" began Chester, but he was interrupted by the sound of a key +turning in the lock of the door. + +A moment later the smiling face of Brunnoi appeared in the doorway. He +entered the room and closed the door behind him. + +"I have come to tell you," he said, "that I am going away for possibly a +week. You shall be kept here until I return. By that time I will have +decided just what to do with you. I am taking most of my men with me, +but I have no fear of your getting out of this room." + +"We are grateful for your thoughtfulness in letting us know you are +going away," said Hal sarcastically. "I am sure we shall miss you." + +"I am glad of that," replied Brunnoi. "Your meals will be brought to you +at regular intervals. Till I return then." + +He waved his hand airily and stepped quickly through the door, closing +and locking it behind him. Immediately he had left the room Alexis +jumped to his feet. Hal and Chester watched him in surprise. + +The giant Cossack walked over to the bed in which he had slept and +quickly stripped it of its coverings. Then, when nothing but the bare +frame remained he stepped inside of it. Doubling up his huge fist, he +drove it into the footboard with tremendous force. There was a +splintering crash and it fell in twain. Wrapping his hardly-used +knuckles in a cloth he picked up from the floor, he repeated the +operation on the headboard--and the bed lay in four pieces on the floor. + +Seizing the first portion by one of the heavy legs, he tore at it with +his naked fingers, like a dog at a bone; and soon, exerting his +tremendous strength, he had stripped it clean. The second of the smaller +legs he treated in the same manner, and likewise one of the larger legs +at the head. Then, with these three clubs in his hands, he approached +the two boys. + +"Here is a weapon apiece for you," he said, extending one of the smaller +legs to the lads. + +Hal and Chester each took the proffered weapons. They were ungainly and +heavy, but the lads realized that they were indeed formidable weapons. +Alexis stood looking at them with the big leg resting lightly on his +right shoulder. It was a massive piece of wood, this third leg, a +terrible weapon in the hands of a giant like Alexis. + +"Now," said Chester, "we have these weapons, but how are we going to get +out of here?" + +"Don't let that worry you," replied the giant. "As soon as we are +certain the bandit king is well on his way, we'll get out." + +An hour they waited--two hours, before Alexis rose slowly to his feet, +indicating that the time for action had come. Slowly he approached the +door and pressed his great weight against it. It did not budge. + +"Surely you are not expecting to get out that way?" said Hal. + +Alexis did not deign to reply. Instead he walked over to the table in +the center of the room, and with a single movement swept the dishes on +to the floor. Then, lifting the heavy table, he raised it above his +head, and advanced upon the door. + +Once, twice, thrice the stout oak table crashed against the solid door. +It gave slightly. The giant struck the door a fourth tremendous blow, +and the table burst into a hundred pieces. + +"There," said Chester, "I didn't think it would give." + +"I was afraid so, too," said Hal. + +Alexis said nothing. Instead he approached the door, and pressed against +it--testing it. Then he turned, and without exertion, wheeled a second +massive bed into position before the door. This he braced with the third +bed, so that by straining his hardest, he could not budge them. + +"What are you going to do now?" demanded Hal. + +"You'll see," replied the giant briefly. + +He stepped between the door and the first bed, close to it. Here, +bracing himself against the bed, he laid his great hands against the +door and pushed. There was a slight cracking noise. Under this terrible +force, the door was straining. And still the giant kept up the pressure. + +The muscles in the back of his neck stood out like bands of iron. The +sinews in his bare arms quivered and seemed about to leap from beneath +his skin; and still Alexis struggled with the unyielding door. There +came again the sound of cracking; and the giant released the pressure. +Even from where they stood, the lads could see the door sway inward into +place, thus showing the pressure that had been put against it. + +The two lads were lost in admiration of the great strength of Alexis. + +"It doesn't seem possible," said Hal, half to himself. + +"It isn't possible," declared Chester. + +But Alexis did not heed these remarks. Hurling the beds away with fierce +kicks, he cleared a space in front of the door. Then he drew back. + +"Look!" exclaimed Chester in an awed voice. + +Even as he spoke, Alexis drew himself together for a spring. Ten quick +steps he took, and then hurled his giant frame against the heavy door. +There was a thud as he smashed against it, followed by a great crash of +splintering wood, and Alexis, door and all went down in a tangled heap. + +Quickly the giant extricated himself and darted back into the room, +where he picked up his massive club. Whirling it wildly about his head +he shouted to the lads: + +"Come on!" + +Without a moment's delay, surprised as they were, the lads lifted their +own weapons, and dashed after the Cossack. Straight out the door of the +bandit chief's private room the three ran into the corridor beyond. +Sprawling figures sitting idly about gave evidence that the chief had +not taken all of his men with him. At the abrupt entrance of Alexis +these jumped to their feet, drawing knives and swords. + +Alexis was upon them in a trice, Hal and Chester close behind him. +Rapidly the huge club of the giant rose and fell, once, twice, +thrice--even to five times, and with each crushing blow a man went down +with a crushed skull. The others drew back. + +The two lads now ranged themselves on either side of Alexis, and +together they charged the foe. There was no escape for the bandits, now +backed into a corner; but they fought back with a desperation born of +despair. Three minutes later there was not a man standing on his feet. + +Alexis rested the end of his club upon the ground, and leaning on it, +wiped the perspiration from his brow. Then, after a brief rest, he led +the way to the entrance to the cavern, barred by the great rock. + +"Here," said Chester, "I am afraid, is where we stop. We do not know how +to open it." + +Alexis pushed the lads aside and examined the rock. Then, without a +word, he dropped his club and put his shoulder to the boulder that +barred the exit. The first attempt made no impression. Taking a deep +breath, the giant tried again. Putting every ounce of his herculean +strength into this final effort, he exerted himself to the utmost. + +Slowly the huge rock began to move. Slowly it began to swing outward. +Then, more rapidly, until, as the catch was released, it swung away back +on its hinges. Alexis, unable to recover his balance, fell forward on +his face. He was up in a moment, however, and the three darted from the +cavern. + +For half a mile they sprinted, seeking to put as great a distance as +possible between themselves and the cavern before pausing for breath. +Then, suddenly, Alexis toppled over on the ground. + +Hal dropped to his knees and gently raised the giant's head. + +"Quick, Chester! Some water!" he cried. + +Chester darted away, and soon returned with water in his cap. This Hal +sprinkled over the giant's face. His efforts were rewarded at length. +The color slowly returned, and Alexis heaved a deep sigh. Consciousness +was returning. + +"Poor fellow," said Hal softly. "He has worn himself out." + +"Yes," said Chester, "and had we not brought him along, we would still +be prisoners in the cavern, with our death only a question of days or +hours." + +"True," said Hal. "And such strength," he added, "I never saw before." + +"Nor do I ever expect to see again," said Chester. + +Now Alexis stirred and groaned. Then he sat up. + +"What has happened?" he demanded. + +"Through your prowess and bravery," Hal made answer, "we have escaped." + +Alexis jumped to his feet and patted himself on the chest. + +"It is true," he said, "I am a brave man; and I am a strong man, am I +not?" + +"There can be no question about either," replied Hal. + +"Still," continued the giant, "all things considered, that was not such +a remarkable feat. Now I remember once----" + +Chester interrupted. + +"Come," he said, taking Alexis by the arm, "we must get away from here. +The story can wait." + +Alexis subsided without further words, and the three continued on their +way. + +"The thing to do now," said Hal, "is to get back to Lodz as quickly as +we can. With luck, we should make it in four days." + +"Yes," agreed Chester, "we have learned what we set out to learn. There +is no use delaying." + +The attention of all three was at that moment attracted by the sound of +galloping horses, nearby. The hoof beats were coming toward them. Alexis +sprang to action. + +"We must have horses," he said in a hoarse whisper. "Otherwise we will +be weeks getting back. We will take these." + +"How?" demanded both lads in a single voice. + +"Follow me," commanded the giant. + +Breaking into a quick run he hurried along the road to where it curved +sharply. Here they could not be seen by the approaching riders until +they actually met. + +Alexis took his stand in the center of the road, motioning for the boys +to take positions, one on each side of the road. Then all stood waiting. + +The hoof beats drew nearer, and then the horses came trotting round the +bend. + +"Only three! Good!" Hal muttered to himself unconsciously. + +The riders were right upon Alexis before they realized that their way +was blocked. They quickly drew rein and attempted to check their +animals; but it was too late. Alexis had two of the horses by the +bridles, and pushing them back on their haunches by main strength, +succeeded in unseating the riders. + +Hal and Chester pounced upon the two unhorsed men, and had their weapons +before they could make a move to defend themselves. Alexis, still +holding to the two horses, called upon the lads to cover the third +rider, who seemed about to make a dash for liberty. + +Hal was quick to obey. + +"One move," he said quietly, as he pointed his newly-acquired revolver +squarely at the third man, "and you are a dead man." + +The latter raised his hands above his head. While Hal kept him covered, +Chester advanced and relieved him of his weapons. Then he ordered him to +dismount. + +Alexis now approached with the other two horses, one of which he turned +over to Chester. Hal took the third horse. + +"We are sorry to be forced to do this," said Hal to the men whose horses +they had appropriated, "but necessity knows no law. We need these +animals worse than you do; therefore, we take them." + +"We are thankful," said one of the men, "that you have spared our +lives." + +Quickly the three friends leaped into their saddles, and spurred their +horses onward. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +ATTACKED. + + +For several hours the friends rode along the narrow mountain pass +without incident. They stopped once at a little mountain stream to +quench their thirst and to allow their horses to drink. Then they rode +on again. + +Rounding a sharp turn in the road, they came squarely upon half a dozen +riders, all attired in Austrian uniforms. Hal realized their peril and +acted upon the instant. + +"Quick!" he shouted to his two friends. "Ride them down!" + +The Austrians were no less surprised than the three friends at this +unexpected encounter; but they also acted quickly. They reined in their +horses and drew their swords and revolvers. + +But before they had time to bring their revolvers to bear, the two lads +and the huge Cossack were upon them, Hal slightly in the lead. + +Hal fired one shot as he swept down upon the foe, but there was no time +for more. The nine horsemen met with a shock, but the Austrians, being +motionless, had the worst of it. The momentum of the horses ridden by +the two lads and the Cossack carried them through. + +"Ride!" shouted Hal, as they burst through the enemy. + +It was no time for fighting if it could be avoided, and the lads +realized it. All three put spurs to their horses and dashed down the +road, rounding a bend just as the Austrians, having recovered, fired. +None was hit. + +"This is one time where discretion is the better part of valor," panted +Hal to his friends, who were riding close beside him. "We'll run for +it." + +The Austrians quickly turned their horses and dashed on in pursuit. + +Hal, glancing back, saw that the enemy was not gaining, and reported +this to his friends. Thus encouraged, they urged their mounts even +faster, and before long had drawn out of sight of the pursuers. But at +the very moment they seemed to be safe, Chester's horse stumbled and +fell, hurling the lad headlong. + +Quickly the others drew up and rushed to his assistance. The lad was not +badly hurt, and was soon able to stand. Then, from the rear, came the +sounds of their pursuers. + +"We can't stand here," cried Hal. "Quick, Chester! Into this clump of +trees." + +Chester did as told and Alexis followed him. Hal, however, seizing the +two horses that were standing led them in between the trees. Then he +sprang to the side of the fallen animal. Grasping him by the head, he +succeeded in getting him to his feet and under cover just before the +Austrians came into sight. A minute later the Austrians swept by. + +Hal breathed a sigh of relief. + +"Pretty close," he said quietly. "Now let's get out of here by the other +side." + +Leading the two horses they started on. Five minutes later there loomed +up through the trees what appeared to be a barn. They advanced toward +it. Not a soul was about, but they proceeded cautiously for they did not +wish to walk into a trap. + +Hal tried the door to the barn. It was locked. Alexis soon remedied +this, however. One quick twitch of his wrist and the lock came off. Hal +went in, and started back with a cry of surprise. + +"What's the matter?" demanded Chester. + +"Matter?" repeated Hal. "Look!" + +He stepped back and Chester peered over his shoulder. + +"Automobiles!" he said in astonishment + +It was true. Inside the shed were four large touring cars. + +"What on earth can they be doing here, I wonder," said Chester. + +"I haven't the faintest idea," replied Hal, "but if we can find any +petrol I should say it is a lucky find for us." + +He made a rapid inspection of the shed, and stopped at the far end with +a low whistle. + +"What is it now?" demanded Chester. + +"Petrol," replied Hal. "Gallons and gallons of it. Now what do you +suppose it is here for?" + +"That doesn't concern us," said Chester dryly. "We'll fill up the tank +of one of these cars and get away." + +Quickly this was done, and the car was run out the door. Chester climbed +into the rear seat and motioned for Alexis to follow him. Alexis +hesitated. + +"I've never been in one of those things," he said slowly. "Now, a horse +is all right. I know all about a horse. But I don't know anything about +these things." + +"Never mind that," said Chester. "Get in here quick. Those Austrians are +likely to be back any minute and we must hurry." + +Alexis climbed in, plainly not without trepidation, and sank back in one +of the comfortable seats. Hal already had taken his place at the wheel, +and slowly the large machine moved forward. + +"I wonder," said Hal to Chester, "whether we can go down these passes +safely." + +"Where a machine has gone once, another may go," said Chester calmly. +"Besides, if you'll notice, there is a well-defined track ahead of you, +and unless I am much mistaken, it goes not toward the road but away from +it." + +"By Jove!" replied Hal. "You are right. Now I wonder how that happens." + +Gradually the car gathered speed, until it was traveling along at a good +gait. Hal did not wish to go too fast, for he was not familiar with the +roads, and besides, the steep grade also precluded this. + +Night fell. Hal stopped the car long enough to light the searchlights. + +"They may betray our presence," he said, "but if I don't light them we +are likely to go into a ditch." + +The car crept along slowly during the night hours, and morning found +them still in the mountains. With the coming of dawn, however, Hal put +on more speed, and by noon they were once more on the plains of Galicia. +Then Hal "let her out." + +Suddenly the machine flashed by a body of troops. Hal swerved to one +side of the road just in time to avoid running into them. Chester caught +a glimpse of their uniforms. + +"Russians!" he called to Hal. + +"Are you sure?" the latter called back. + +"Sure," replied Chester. + +Hal reduced the speed of the car. + +"In that event I'll slow down," he said. + +The car went along now at a more moderate pace; but once again on a road +clear of troops, the speed was increased. They made several stops along +the route, and it was late the following afternoon when they recognized +the familiar minarets of Lodz. Half an hour later the lads were admitted +to the presence of the Grand Duke, Alexis remaining outside in the +automobile. + +Hal made his report to the Grand Duke clearly and concisely. + +"I feared as much," said the Russian commander-in-chief, when the lad +had finished. "You have done well, however. You will rejoin your +regiment as soon as convenient." + +At this moment Count de Reslau appeared in the Grand Duke's tent. He did +not at first notice the presence of the two lads, and bowed to the +Russian commander. + +"Your Excellency----" he began. + +At that moment his eyes rested on Hal and Chester and a look of surprise +and consternation passed over his face. + +"You here?" he cried. + +Hal and Chester bowed. + +"Yes, sir," said the latter quietly. + +The Grand Duke turned to the count with a smile. + +"And they have successfully performed their mission," he said. "But it +is even as I have feared. Brunnoi will support Austria. And what is +worse, my plans are being learned by at least one of his agents and sent +to the Austrian general staff." + +"Impossible!" exclaimed the count, who had now regained his composure. +He turned to the two lads. "Certainly," he said, "when I saw you last I +did not expect that you would ever return here. It was a hazardous +mission the Duke sent you on. Are you sure your information is +authentic?" + +"Perfectly," replied Hal calmly. "Brunnoi himself was our informer." + +"In that case," said the count with a shrug of his shoulders, "you must +be right." + +He turned, and with a few brief words to the Grand Duke, left the tent. +The lads talked for some moments with the Russian commander-in-chief, +and then left the tent, informing him that they would join their +regiment the following day. Outside, they climbed again into the +automobile and Hal drove the car to the house where they had left +Marquis. + +The dog was overjoyed at seeing his friends again. His tail wagged +fiercely and he barked with gladness, insisting upon kissing all three, +in spite of their protests. + +"Down, Marquis!" cried Hal with a laugh. "Do you want to eat us up. Now +what do you say, sir, will you be glad to rejoin your regiment +to-morrow?" + +"Yes! Yes!" barked Marquis. + +"Good!" said Chester. "But we will leave you here while we get something +to eat. Then we will come back and get you." + +The three left the house, and made their way to the nearest restaurant, +where they ordered a sumptuous meal. It had been long days since they +had tasted food in plenty, and they ate hungrily. It was almost dark +when they left the restaurant and started after Marquis. + +As they passed down a side street, five men armed with long knives +sprang out upon them. The three friends were caught off their guard by +the suddenness of the attack, and in spite of the fact that they drew +their swords, for they were again in uniform, their assailants pressed +them sorely. A sword thrust pierced Hal in the arm, and his weapon fell +to the ground. He drew his revolver with his left hand, however, and +fired point-blank at his adversary. His aim was true, and there was one +enemy less. + +At the same moment Chester ran his opponent through, and Alexis brought +another to the ground. The other two turned and fled. + +"I wonder what that was for?" said Chester, brushing himself off. + +"I can't imagine why we should have been attacked," declared Hal. + +He broke off; for at that moment he espied a figure standing in a nearby +doorway; eyeing them evilly. Hal caught Chester by the arm, and pointed +to the figure. + +"There is the answer," he said quietly. + +Chester gazed in the direction indicated. Then, with a sudden cry, both +boys dashed toward the doorway. + +For the man they saw, with a sneer curving his lips, wore a long, +flowing, white beard and a military uniform. + +He was Brunnoi, chief of the Hungarian bandits! + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + +A STRANGE DISCOVERY. + + +Seeing that he was discovered, Brunnoi darted from the doorway and tried +to escape. But he was not quick enough. The lads were upon him in an +instant, and beneath their weight the bandit chief was hurled to the +ground. He struggled fiercely, clawing and scratching like a cat; but +Hal and Chester were too much for him. + +Brunnoi finally ceased his struggles and lay quietly in the lads' hands. +Hal took him by the collar and jerked him to his feet; then, each lad +taking an arm, they led their prisoner straight to the Grand Duke's +quarters. They were admitted instantly, and pushing their captive before +them, they approached the Russian commander-in-chief. + +"Whom have you there?" demanded the Grand Duke, looking at the prisoner. + +"Brunnoi, sir," replied Hal calmly. + +"What!" cried the Grand Duke, springing to his feet. "Is this the bandit +chief?" + +"It is, sir," replied Chester. + +"I am Brunnoi," said the bandit calmly. "You have me. What will you do +with me?" + +"You shall be shot in the morning!" cried the Grand Duke angrily. + +Brunnoi smiled. + +"I fear you are mistaken," he said quietly. + +The Grand Duke grew very angry. + +"You shall be shot at eight o'clock," he said very quietly. "You have +already caused me much trouble. I can't afford to let you escape." + +He summoned a guard of an officer and ten men, and turned the bandit +chief over to them, with orders that he be shot in the morning at eight +o'clock. + +As Brunnoi was led by the three lads, he smiled at them. + +"I will see you later," he said calmly. + +The Grand Duke thanked the lads for their important capture, and then, +with Alexis, they made their way to the house where Marquis was waiting +for them. They were given connecting rooms and were soon in bed. + +Tired out they slept heavily. Therefore, while they had expected to +arise before eight o'clock, nine found them still sleeping. They were +awakened at last, however, by the sounds of a commotion in the adjoining +room. + +The two lads sat up in bed and listened intently. Heavy footsteps +tramped toward their door and it was thrown open with a quick jerk. + +Hal and Chester uttered exclamations of surprise. Confronting them, in +the doorway, was the smiling face of Brunnoi, who was to have been put +to death an hour before. In his hand he held two revolvers, covering the +lads. + +"You see I have kept my word," he said. "I was not shot." + +"How did you escape?" demanded Hal, asking the only question he could +think of at that moment. + +"Never mind that," replied the bandit. "Get your clothes on quickly, and +come with me." + +Under the muzzles of the two revolvers, the lads dressed hurriedly. The +presence of Alexis in the adjoining room--the giant lying completely +covered up by bed clothes--passed unnoticed. But Alexis, beneath his +covering, heard what was going on and understood. + +"Go out ahead of me," ordered Brunnoi. + +He dropped his two revolvers into side pockets, but kept his fingers on +the trigger of each. + +"One false move and I'll drop you," he said quietly. "Now, march!" + +Slowly the lads left the room, and Brunnoi followed them; but hardly had +they disappeared through the door, when Alexis bounded out of bed and +silently followed. + +At the outside door, Brunnoi stepped back to allow his captives to pass +out first. For an instant he was off his guard. It was Alexis' +opportunity and he leaped suddenly forward. + +Brunnoi heard the sound of the giant's footsteps. He turned quickly, and +drew his revolvers, but the Cossack's leap was too quick. With a single +movement he sent both of the weapons from the bandit's hands, and +reached out to seize him. + +Brunnoi was as slippery as an eel. He eluded Alexis' grasp and darted +through the door. Now without weapons, he took to his heels. + +Hal perceived the flying apparition, and reached out a hand to detain +him. He clutched the flowing white beard of the bandit chief--and the +beard came away in his hand. Brunnoi fled down the steps and made good +his escape, Hal being too surprised to move. + +Chester and Alexis were equally as astonished. + +"Well, what do you think of that?" demanded Chester, in great surprise. +"A false beard! But I wonder how he escaped from the firing squad." + +"It's too deep for me," Hal admitted. "But we had better report this to +the Grand Duke." + +Together they made their way to the quarters of the commander-in-chief. +The latter listened to their story with interest. + +"I have just learned of Brunnoi's escape from the firing squad," he said +when they had finished their account of their experience with the bandit +chief. "Count de Reslau, being a Hungarian himself, was greatly +interested in this Brunnoi. He asked me for a pass to see him, I granted +this request. The guards saw the count leave the tent after a few +moments' conversation. But when they went in to lead Brunnoi forth to +execution, he was gone, and another man was there in his stead. He had +exchanged places with Brunnoi." + +"Have you perfect confidence in Count de Reslau, Your Excellency?" asked +Hal. + +"Absolute confidence," replied the Grand Duke. "Why?" + +"No particular reason," replied the lad. + +At this moment Count de Reslau himself entered the tent. + +"I hear Brunnoi has escaped," was his first remark to the Grand Duke. + +"Unfortunately, that is true," replied the Russian commander. + +"Strange," said the count. "When I talked to him a couple of hours ago +he seemed resigned to his fate." + +"But," said the Grand Duke, "he paid these lads a visit soon after his +escape. Following a struggle, he again got away." + +The count glanced at the lads incredulously. + +"Has it ever occurred to Your Excellency," he said quietly, "that these +two lads may know more about Brunnoi than they care to admit?" + +"What!" exclaimed the Grand Duke. + +Hal took a quick step forward. + +"What do you mean by that?" he asked calmly. + +"You know what I mean," replied the count with a sneer. + +He turned again to the Grand Duke. "Has it never occurred to you, Your +Excellency, that these boys may be associated with the bandit--that they +may have been leading you on." + +"But, but," stammered the Grand Duke, "their mission to the Carpathians. +Their struggle to get away and their flight. What of those?" + +"Mere fiction, I should say," said the count with a shrug of his +shoulders. + +Hal stepped directly in front of the count. + +"That is a lie," he said quietly. + +The count raised a hand as if to strike him, then thought better of it +and turned away without a word. Plainly the count's words had made an +impression upon the Grand Duke. He looked at the two lads closely. + +"What have you to say to that charge?" he demanded. + +"Nothing," replied Chester, "except that it is too absurd to be given +credence." + +"Absurd," sneered the count. "You brought the bandit here in the first +place, realizing that it would give you standing with the Grand Duke, +and knowing all the time that the way had been paved for his escape. If +you had no hand in his escape, how did you know he had gotten away +before coming here?" + +"He came after us," said Hal, "and would have led us away had it not +been for Alexis." + +"Absurd," said the count again and turned to the Grand Duke. "You see," +he said, "how foolish that is. You should have concocted a better +story," he added to Hal. + +Now the Count de Reslau was one of the Grand Duke's closest friends, +and, as the Duke had said, he had implicit confidence in him. It was +only natural, therefore, that he should be impressed with his reasoning. + +He advanced upon the two lads, and pointed an accusing finger at each. + +"The count is right!" he exclaimed in a loud voice. "I can see it all! +You are traitors! I would have sworn by your honor in spite of the short +time I have known you. You have rendered me, I still believe, valuable +service; but you have caused me to play into the hands of the enemy in +other matters." + +"Your Excellency," said Chester, stepping forward. "Count de Reslau +possibly means well, but he is badly mistaken. His reasoning is at +fault. We are innocent of this charge." + +"You deny it?" fairly shouted the Duke. + +"Of course they deny it," said the count. "It is hardly probable they +would admit being traitors and spies." + +"I understand perfectly," declared Nicholas as he stepped to the door of +his tent. + +"Orderly," he called, "summon the corporal and ten men." + +He stepped back into the tent and turned upon the two lads angrily. + +"You shall see how we treat traitors in Russia," he said. + +An officer and ten men now strode into the tent. The Grand Duke waved +his hands toward the two lads. + +"Take them out and shoot them immediately." + +The officer advanced toward the lads. + +"Your Excellency!" exclaimed Hal, stepping forward. + +"Enough!" cried the Grand Duke. "I will be trifled with no longer. +Officer, do your duty!" + +The guards surrounded the boys, and they were marched from the tent. + +Count de Reslau smiled to himself as they were led away, and turned to +the Grand Duke. + +"Let us go out and watch the proceedings," he said. + +"Very well," agreed the Grand Duke, and they hurried after the firing +squad and the prisoners. + +The lads stood facing their would-be executioners when the Grand Duke +and Count de Reslau appeared. At that moment, Hal felt something in his +pocket that gave him a sudden thrill. + +"I am going to take one last chance," he said to Chester. To the Duke he +called: "Your Excellency, may I make a last request?" + +The Grand Duke nodded an assent. + +"I would say once more, Your Excellency," said Hal, "that we are +innocent. But," he paused, "I can produce Brunnoi himself!" + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +THE MYSTERY CLEARED. + + +Chester stared in astonishment at his friend. Had he gone mad and taken +this means of staying their execution? + +The Grand Duke staggered back a step, and Count de Reslau smiled +incredulously. + +"Have I your permission to do so, Your Excellency?" asked Hal. + +The Grand Duke waved his hand. + +"You shall have three minutes to produce him," he said angrily. + +"Good!" said Hal. "It will require even less." + +His right hand was in his pocket. Suddenly it flashed forth, and with it +something white. Straight toward Count de Reslau the lad sprang, and +before the latter could leap out of the way Hal grasped him firmly by +the back of the neck with his left hand, and with his right clapped a +long, flowing white beard to his face. Then with a twist, he whirled him +so that he faced the Grand Duke. + +"Behold Brunnoi, chief of the bandits!" he cried. + +The Grand Duke staggered back again, and put one hand to his eyes. + +"Impossible!" he exclaimed. + +But he was forced to believe what his eyes saw. Count de Reslau and +Brunnoi, the bandit chief, were one and the same man. There could be no +doubt of that. + +In vain did the bandit struggle to free himself from Hal's firm grasp. +The lad clung to him tightly in spite of all his efforts. Then, +realizing that the Grand Duke must be convinced, he dropped the beard to +the ground and stepped back while half a dozen rifles covered the count. + +The Grand Duke, with a wave of his arm, instructed the officer in +command of the firing squad to release the two lads. Then he ordered him +to conduct the bandit chief to his quarters, and motioned the lads to +follow. Inside the tent the Grand Duke turned upon his false friend. + +"De Reslau," he said, addressing the prisoner, "we have been friends, +and for that reason I am offering you a chance to make a satisfactory +explanation--if you can." + +"I have nothing to say," replied the prisoner. + +"Will you tell me how you have conducted your operations?" + +The bandit did not reply and Hal stepped forward. + +"Your Excellency," he said, "I believe I can rehearse it from beginning +to end. The count probably will correct me if I am wrong." + +The Grand Duke ordered him to proceed. + +"Well," said Hal, "the count knew of our mission. We went horseback, but +the count, being prepared for these rapid journeys, proceeded by +automobile." + +The bandit chief glanced at the lad in surprise. + +"How did you know that?" he demanded. + +"We stumbled upon your automobile garage in the mountains," said Hal +quietly. "Of course, when we returned, the count was waiting for us. Why +he left us behind alive when he came back here, I don't know, but I now +remember how greatly surprised the count was to see us back safely. +Immediately he planned to get us out of the way. Hence the attack the +other night, in which we were fortunate enough to capture him." + +"But the escape?" demanded the Grand Duke. "How did he escape?" + +"Very simple," replied Hal. "The man to whom you gave the pass to see +the prisoner was of course not Count de Reslau, but a man made up to +resemble him. Am I right, count?" + +"Yes," replied the bandit. "I have kept him near me for that very +purpose. He had his orders that in the event I was ever arrested, he +would make up to resemble me." + +"Exactly," continued Hal. "Once alone with the prisoner the rest was +easy. He removed his disguise, and Brunnoi removed his. Brunnoi came out +as Count de Reslau, and the other man stayed. Naturally, the first thing +the count thought of when he was free was to dispose of Chester and +myself. Hence his call this morning. As he escaped from Alexis I +succeeded in pulling off his beard. That's all there is to it." + +"And now," demanded the bandit chief, "what are you going to do with +me?" + +"There is but one thing I can do with you," replied the Grand Duke. "The +fate of Count de Reslau shall be the same as that already pronounced for +Brunnoi, the bandit. You shall be shot within the hour. Personal +friendship shall not keep me from doing my duty. Officer, see that my +command is carried out." + +The guard closed in about Count de Reslau and he was led away. Then the +Grand Duke Nicholas, commander-in-chief of the Russian armies, sank into +a chair, and buried his face in his arms on the table. Quietly the lads +left the tent. + +"By Jove!" exclaimed Chester, as they walked along, "you spotted de +Reslau just in time. Another moment and it would have been too late. +Tell me, how did you happen to hit it?" + +"Ever since I pulled Brunnoi's beard off this morning," replied Hal, +"another face has kept flashing into my mind. I could not make it out +clearly until just as we stood before the firing squad. Then I saw it as +plain as day." + +"It's lucky for us that you did," said Chester with enthusiasm. "But +here comes Alexis. He'll be glad to know that Brunnoi has been disposed +of." + +And he was. + +"But you make much over a small matter," he said. + +"Small matter!" exclaimed Chester. "I should say that proving Brunnoi +and Count de Reslau were one and the same person was quite a big +matter." + +"If you had asked me," returned Alexis calmly, "I could have told you +that several days ago." + +"You could?" cried both lads in a single voice. + +"Of course. I knew it right along. You see, my eyes are unusually keen. +I remember once how this keen sight proved of great advantage. We were +on a raid. The officer in command, using his glasses, could not quite +make out objects moving some miles away. He called upon me. My eyes, +being far more powerful than the glass, showed me plainly what was going +on, and we were thus kept from falling into a trap. Then I remember +another case----" + +"One is enough," said Hal dryly. "If you knew Brunnoi and Count de +Reslau were the same person, why didn't you say so?" + +"Why," said Alexis in no wise disconcerted, "I didn't see that it made +any difference." + +"Then your sight is not so good after all," said Chester. "But what are +we going to do now, Hal?" + +"Well," said Hal, "I guess we might as well go get Marquis and return to +our regiment. Our work here is done." + +The dog was indeed glad to accompany his three friends forth once more, +and so, procuring three fiery chargers, the trio set out to rejoin their +regiment at the front--some miles to the west of the city of Lodz. + +Most of the officers of the regiment to which the three were attached +had been killed in the previous battle, and so when they finally reached +it, Alexis found that instead of being a lieutenant he had become a +captain. + +"You see," he told the boys confidentially, "a brave man always comes +into his own. You will see how these fellows fight with me at their +head. They will be a whole lot different, I can tell you." + +The Russians had intrenched themselves along the entire front, as had +the Germans only a short distance away. During the days in which the +lads had been in the midst of the Carpathians, there had been only +skirmishing between the opposing forces. Long range artillery duels +raged incessantly; but there had been little work for the cavalry and +infantry. + +There had of course been several charges and counter charges, but the +advantage rested with neither side. The Russian troops, in spite of the +cold weather, made themselves comfortable in the trenches, wrapped to +the chin in their heavy sheepskin garments. Used to severe winter +weather, the Russian troops did not fare as badly as did the Germans, +who suffered severely. + +The lads' regiment was stationed near the center of the long line of +battle. Preparations for a movement of some sort were being made on all +sides. Troops were being hurried here and there, and officers dashed +hither and yon. Occasionally the men burst into song; while from the +German trenches came the chanting of the "Watch on the Rhine." The men +of both armies were making the best of the situation, and seemed +reasonably happy. + +From his pocket one of the Russian officers now produced a pack of +cards. Alexis, invited to take a hand, consented, but Hal and Chester +refused. + +"What's the matter?" demanded the officer. "Are you too good to play +cards?" + +"Not a bit," smiled Hal. "We simply don't care to play, that's all. We +do play occasionally, for pastime, but we don't gamble." + +"Don't gamble!" exclaimed the officer. "How can you play cards if you +don't gamble. Come on now, we need two more players." + +"No," said Hal, decidedly. "We shall have to ask you to excuse us." + +Even Alexis glanced at the lads in astonishment. Plainly this was beyond +his comprehension, as gambling among the Cossacks is an ordinary +pastime. But the other officer was not satisfied. He arose and came +directly up to Hal. + +"You must play with us," he said. + +"I am sorry," replied Hal, "but we do not care to play." + +"Afraid, eh?" said the Russian. + +"No," replied Hal, "we are not afraid. We simply don't care to play." + +"You are cowards," said the Russian, and jostled Hal with his shoulder. + +Hal stood his ground and refused to be pushed aside. The Russian reached +out a thumb and finger and pulled Hal's nose. Then he staggered back, +for Hal had sent his fist crashing against his chest. + +Quickly the Russian officer drew his sword and sprang upon the lad, who +also drew his weapon and stood on guard. But now Alexis leaped to his +feet, and his own sword struck up the weapons of the others. + +"Enough of this," he said sternly. "Put up your swords." + +"I have no desire to fight," replied Hal calmly. + +"I know you haven't," sneered the Russian. "You are afraid. But I demand +satisfaction for that blow." + +"Well," said Alexis, "if you must fight, let it be with fists." + +"Any way suits me," said the Russian. + +"If he insists on a fight, I am willing to give it to him," said Hal, +and quickly threw off his coat. + +The Russian also discarded his heavy coat, and the two squared off. It +was perfectly plain to Hal that the Russian, although considerably +larger than himself, was no boxer, and he had little doubt of the +outcome, for the lad was proficient in the use of his fists. + +The Russian came forward with a rush. Hal sidestepped neatly, and the +huge fist passed by harmlessly. Hal sent a quick sharp blow to the +Russian's cheek, staggering him a bit. The latter turned and again +rushed at the lad. + +Quite a crowd had now collected around the combatants and watched the +contest eagerly. As the Russian rushed at him this time, Hal struck up +the blow with his left forearm, and stepping in close planted his right +over his opponent's heart. The Russian staggered back, and at the same +time Hal sent a series of left and right jabs to his opponent's face. + +But the Russian, recovering, bored in again, striking out wildly at the +lad. The latter gave a clever exhibition of footwork, and not a single +blow landed. At the same time he continued to tap the Russian lightly on +either side of the face. + +Suddenly the Russian lowered his hands and stepped back. + +"I quit," he said, smiling foolishly. "There is no use trying to hit a +man when he runs away all the time. Now with swords or pistols----" + +"There will be no swords or pistols used while I am here to prevent it," +exclaimed Alexis. + +At that very instant the clear call of a bugle sounded in the Russian +trenches. Quickly all personal animosities were forgotten, and the men +sprang to their posts. + +It was the signal for an advance. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +THE ATTACK. + + +The reconnoitering cavalry of the advancing forces gave way to groups of +infantry, scattered in loose formation, feeling their way toward the +German trenches. The points and small flanking parties of the advance +guards, in front of each column of advance, crept along with straining +eyes in search of the enemy's line of observation. + +A few hundred yards to the rearward the supports advanced alertly, ready +to scatter into a thin line of skirmishers at the first shot and rush +ahead to where the points halted. In the rear of them the infantry +columns, with one rumble of artillery close to the front, moved and +halted, as the thin line to the front paused for a moment to scan ahead, +then pushed on again. + +Out of the stillness of the dew-dripping woods in front, the shot came. +There was no reply for a moment, then two or three closer reports rang +loud in reply; then there came another pause, and as the hurrying +supports deployed and flung themselves behind the nearest cover, in +momentary scanning before pushing ahead to investigate decisively, there +came a short, ragged volley from out ahead. + +The reports were flat and dull, as a rule, but a few cracked viciously +as though fired close at hand. These last followed the vacuum of +low-flying bullets and had a spat and twang of their own. + +For weeks these two armies had been facing each other; for a week +assault had wrestled with counter assault and the armies had striven +time after time to snatch an advantage from a massing of columns, or a +seeming check. + +For miles to right and left, every road, every footpath, every few yards +of broken ground was trodden by the feet of short columns, prepared to +charge into lines at the needed moment, when the fire of the enemy +became a menace. The trenches were abandoned in the rear, yet should the +columns in the rear, which by the heads formed a long, long line of +supports, be hurled back in repulse after an unsuccessful attack, the +trenches would be greeted as comfortable old friends and reoccupied. + +The leading columns deployed into thin lines, with short intervals +between the men, as the shrapnel broke. From out the blur of the +mingling of landscape and sky there came, simultaneously, a whir, a +crash, and the quick dash of shrapnel balls over the ground, and of the +brief flash which marked the shrapnel's burst there remained only a +dimly-seen lingering cloud of dirty smoke and some silent, writhing +forms on the ground. + +Then came crash after crash, as the hostile artillery opened in +strength. The silence of the morning fled into a hideous din as the +infantry broke into a dog trot and pushed ahead. + +There came a clank of trace chains and the pounding of hoofs mingling +with hoarse commands as the artillery of the Russians wheeled out of +column to position in battery, the ring of hastily-opened breechblocks, +the hollow thump of the blocks closing and the shrill notes of a silvery +whistle. Then the earth began to tremble. + +Thunderbolt after thunderbolt seemed to be discharging close in the +rear, until the very trees shook and men swayed under the compression of +air in the vicinity. Over the heads of the silent infantry, shrapnel +shrieked in reply, one after another, as the batteries opened with +salvos from flank to flank. + +Through the gaps between the belching batteries poured the infantry, the +columns dashing forward until, beneath the trajectory of the guns, it +was safe to spread out in the always thin line of the infantry advance. +The leading lines pushed on till they disappeared in the yet dim light, +and at a short distance behind them came others, until it seemed that +the end would never come, and that a hurrying city was passing. + +Ahead, the leading infantry line, absorbing the scattered men of the +first light contact line, halted at command under the mounting rifle +fire of the enemy, halted and flung itself prone, while ready hands +reached backward for intrenching tools, and the line scraped, clawed, +scooped and burrowed into the fresh earth in shallow pits, and went +about its business of returning the German fire. + +Then a second thin line ran up and merged with the first. Again shovel +and small mattock came into play and the volume of fire redoubled. Above +the cracking of the rifles the only sounds to be heard were the sharp +whistles of the officers. They shrilled in a variety of notes and +combinations, yet with an understood speech of their own, for in parts +of the line the fire slackened and two or three men left their shelter +and crept forward a few paces; or, crouching down low, dashed ahead +until the whistles spoke again. + +Intrenching tool again; then fire. That was the order of the advance. +More men crept or rushed to the new position to dig themselves into the +ground and open fire, until the entire line had advanced a few yards +under the hostile shots and a new line occupied the shelter trenches +recently abandoned. + +Here and there lay quiet forms across the path of advance. The hardy +bodies in the well-fitting uniforms seemed pitilessly small and their +clothing hung in baggy folds. Their comrades passed them by with hardly +a glance. The litter sections were far to the rear, for their time was +not yet. Duty called for assault, not for succor. + +The thunder of the contending batteries continued. Over the hastily +carved trenches the hostile shrapnel scorched their way, singing along +with a note of wild rage, searching the crevasses and folds of the +ground and scoring the earth. + +But the Russian infantry still advanced. + +Quietly filling the gaps that had grown in the firing line since the +attack commenced, the supporting lines came to the front. Each accession +of reënforcements seemed to give an added impetus to the forward +movement, for upon the arrival of each fresh contingent the line surged +ahead like breakers on a coast, and, like the incoming tide, each surge +left its mark higher upon the strand. + +With a calmness which bespoke experience, despite the light of battle +which blazed in their eyes, the new men brought and distributed fresh +bandoliers of ammunition to those who had gone before, then took their +places alongside to aid in its expenditure. The lines were not straight. +They zigzagged a trifle. There was no time for chalk-mark adjustment or +inspection, and the moment a panting body struck the ground after a +forward rush, the earth began to fly on the spot beneath the chop of the +trench-digging tools, and the hot rifles to speak. + +Men growled, muttered and shouted. Under the fighting fog that beset +each one in its own way, there came snatches of song, humming and +whistling. There were those, too, who fought silently, as though deeply +wrapped in thought, and there was bickering when a hasty comrade crowded +too close for free operation of the flying breechbolts; yet the faces +were ever turned to the front, except when they turned to the sky or the +earth, and nerveless hands fell sprawling with half-emptied rifles. + +Where officers, binoculars in hand, bent hastily to the line, men +detached themselves at intervals, and clawing at their belts, seized the +wire cutters pendant there and crawled forward. Now and then one of the +creeping ones would spring into the air and topple over, but the rest, +apparently paying no heed, continued on their way toward where the +Germans had erected wire entanglements to hold the stormers under the +blast of the enemy's fire. + +Ahead, the trenches of the Germans crackled and spat with fury, and even +under the ceaseless rain of shrapnel from above the assaulting lines the +enemy kept his place. The firing line had thickened until it was a solid +mass, one man deep, and in the rear line after line had sprung to its +feet and was closing up in support to the crucial assault. At the +trenches of the defenders, batteries, with horses falling and being cut +away in an instant, dashed to the line, unlimbered and poured in their +scattering salutations of zero shrapnel to the men in front. + +Came a clank and rattle of bayonets snapped onto the muzzles of the +assaulting line; then, with a last frenzied emptying of magazines, the +lines sprang to foot, and with hoarse voices screeching at top note, the +slender line charged forward. + +The trenches were lined with the defenders in an instant. The rifle fire +redoubled in intensity and the artillery, which had come up to stem the +tide, or assault when the supporting batteries of the attack were +compelled to hold their fire for fear of obliterating their own +attacking lines, barked at four-second intervals, opening great gaps in +the racing line at every discharge. + +In rear of the supporting lines of the assault, which were closing up at +a dead run, galloped the batteries which were to make a rallying point +in case the assault failed, or occupy the trenches, should the defenders +be driven out, and the cannoneers clutched the side rails as the pieces +swayed and rocked across the rough ground and clustered bodies which +strewed the field. + +At the crest of the parapet the lines, attack and defense met with a +ring of steel. Bayonets flashed, darted, parried and struck. Rifle butts +whirled above bare heads and the stocks crashed down through bone and +flesh. From both sides came a rain of hand grenades, bombs which +exploded upon touch. From the rear of the trenches there came running +formed troops, to assist in the repulse of the Russians, and as the +supporting lines of the attack threw themselves into the fray, the +whirling, struggling, fighting lines on the trenches' top thickened and +swayed. + +The line sagged, bulged, trembled, and broke in huge gaps. Into the +splaying breaches there rushed fresh troops from front and rear, and the +lines thickened and swayed again. Men discarded their arms to lock in +one another's embrace, fighting to the last. + +The din was deafening, yet above it there rang out the detonation and +shock of a great explosion, where a delayed mine belched upward under +the pressure of the hastening troops coming up with the attacking +reserve. Earth, stones, wire entanglements, arms and men shot upward in +a dense geyser of death, and came down in the midst of the fierce +fighting. + +Then the line broke again, and the shattered reserves of the attack, +summoning the last resources, poured into the breach with bayonet and +magazine. + +The defense gave way. + +Crumpled under the last despairing hurling of last reserves, the +entrenched line shuddered along its length, then the line lost its +cohesion, stood irresolute for a moment, then fled precipitately to the +rear. + +The whistles of the Russian officers blew again and again. Officers had +fallen until corporals and sergeants commanded platoons and companies; +yet they, too, had their whistles and knew their duties; and out of the +scramble of the attack, regardless of company, regiment or brigade, the +Russians fell into rough line, knelt, and opened fire upon the routed +enemy, while the supporting batteries dashed to the trenches, unlimbered +and belched fire and iron into the fleeing mass. + +The standards of the Russians, which had changed hands a dozen times, +during the course of the assault, were planted on the works; the troops +themselves, exhausted and spent by the might and fury of their efforts, +threw themselves into tired heaps as other brigades came up to hold the +position. + +The trenches were won! + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +THE DEATH OF A FRIEND. + + +Hal, Chester and Alexis had been in the midst of the fray, where the +fighting was the thickest. Not in the first line of attack, they had +advanced with the first reserves. And beside them, snapping, biting and +snarling, strode Marquis. + +Now the herculean prowess of the giant Cossack stood them all in good +stead. More than once Hal or Chester would have gone down, or been +trampled under foot by the troops behind, had not the quick eye of +Alexis signaled out their danger and his powerful arm come to their aid. +Guarding himself perfectly from the sword and bayonet thrusts of the +enemy, after the fighting became hand to hand, the Cossack fought like a +madman, as did others of his race, hurling himself upon his foes with +almost superhuman ferocity. + +For the first time the two lads had the experience of digging trenches +as they advanced upon the enemy, and in spite of the fact that they were +officers, they did not shirk the work. Just before reaching the parapet, +the first line of reserves--to which the friends were attached--joined +the original first line and sprang into the trenches together. + +There they fought with desperation. Not a word was exchanged between +them, although they fought side by side. There was no time for +conversation. The press was too thick, and death too near. + +But now that the Germans had turned to flee, the Russians sent up a wild +cry of triumph. Hal, Chester and Alexis rested upon their weapons, +watching the troops pour a hail of lead into the flying foe. Marquis +advanced several paces ahead of the farthest Russian troops, stood up on +his hind legs and let out a bark of joy. Bullets flew around him, and +Chester, realizing the dog's danger, whistled sharply. Marquis turned +and wagged his tail at his friend, and opened his mouth in one more +joyful bark. + +It was at that moment that a German bullet struck him. Without a sound +the noble animal crumpled up and fell to the ground. The ball had +pierced his throat. But life was not extinct. Marquis struggled to his +feet, and dragged himself toward Hal and Chester, who, having seen him +fall, dashed toward him. + +Gently Chester lifted Marquis' heavy weight up in his arms, holding him +so that the blood would not flow so rapidly from the gaping wound in his +throat. Marquis looked up into the lad's face, and uttered a low, +painful bark. His tail wagged. + +Quickly the lads hurried back to Alexis and as quickly sought out a +surgeon. Chester laid Marquis gently on the ground, and the surgeon bent +over him. After a brief examination he arose and shook his head. + +"No hope," he said quietly. "The bullet pierced his jugular vein." + +"Isn't there something you can do?" pleaded Chester, tears streaming +down his face. + +The surgeon shook his head sadly. + +"Nothing," he said, and hurried away. + +Chester picked Marquis up again, and followed by Hal and Alexis, made +his way toward the rear, where the troops were more scattered, and where +there was none to bother them. Hal drew off his coat, and Chester laid +the dog on it. + +Marquis did not whimper. He, as well as his three friends, seemed to +know that death was not far off, and he was prepared to meet the end +bravely, as a soldier-dog should. He turned slightly and licked +Chester's hand that lay upon his head. Chester patted him gently, but he +was beyond words. + +Alexis extended a huge hand and softly stroked the dog's soft body. + +"Poor fellow!" he said to himself. + +Marquis' keen ears caught these words, and he turned feebly toward the +giant Cossack, and strained slightly toward him. At the same time he +slowly raised a paw. Chester saw the movement. + +"He wants to shake hands with you, Alexis," he said brokenly. + +The giant drew nearer, and gravely took Marquis' right paw in his great +hand. Once, twice, three times he shook it gently, then laid it upon the +ground and turned away. Marquis moved restlessly, and uttered a short +bark. He was trying to see Hal, who was kneeling behind him. + +Hal arose and came around. To him also Marquis extended his paw, and Hal +grasped it and pressed it. Then, shifting his position slightly, the dog +also extended the paw to Chester. He seemed to know well that the end +was swiftly approaching, and he wished to shake hands with all his +friends before he passed away. + +Now the three gathered about the head of their dying friend. Alexis +clenched his great fists and spoke to Marquis. + +"I shall see that you are avenged," he said fiercely. "Twenty German +lives will not pay for this day's work, but I'll do the best I can. Do +you understand, Marquis?" + +Marquis' tail beat a weak tattoo upon the ground, and he barked feebly. +He understood. + +"I'll do it!" said Alexis. "You may rest assured of that." + +Now the end was fast approaching. Marquis' breath came in quick gasps. +Suddenly he staggered to his feet, stood upright a second, turned his +face toward the distant enemy, and gave utterance to one sharp bark--a +bark of defiance. Then he sank to the ground. + +His three friends dropped to their knees and bent over him. He looked up +into their faces and it seemed to all that he smiled at them. His tail +struck the ground feebly, once, twice. He shook once with a silent +convulsion. Then his body straightened out and stiffened. He lay still. + +Marquis was dead. + +His three friends rose slowly to their feet, and lifted their caps from +their heads. + +"Good old Marquis!" said Hal. "But he died as a soldier should!" + +"Yes," said Chester, "and with almost his last breath he breathed +defiance to the Germans, whom he hated." + +"There wasn't a better or braver soldier in the Russian army," said +Alexis. "We must bury him with honors." + +"We shall!" cried Chester. + +"I am somewhat handy with a knife," said Alexis. "I shall carve him a +little monument." + +"And he shall be laid to rest with full military honors," said Chester. + +And so it was done. + +All that day Alexis worked upon the little monument. When it was finally +completed, all was in readiness for the burial. The dog had made friends +in the regiment. Not a man but had become attached to him; and so it was +no small funeral cortege that escorted the body of the dog-hero to his +last resting place. + +From the quartermaster Chester had secured a large French flag. + +"He shall be buried beneath his own flag," he said, and spreading the +tricolor upon the ground, he laid the stiffened body of Marquis upon it. + +Gently he wrapped it about the dog, and then, while practically the +whole regiment stood at attention around the little grave, he placed the +body in the ground and stepped back. A volley was fired over the grave, +and the lads shoveled in the earth. + +Now Alexis approached, and, making a small hole at the head of the +grave, set up the little monument. And when he had finished, the +soldiers crowded around to read the epitaph that the giant Cossack had +inscribed in the hard wood. It was this: + +"Marquis--killed on the field of honor!" + +It was upon the following day that the welcome news came that there was +to be further action. Practically every Cossack regiment at the front in +Poland was ordered back to Lodz, their places being taken by other +Russian cavalry and infantry. + +Again in Lodz the lads learned what this new movement meant. Grand Duke +Nicholas, the investment of Galicia having been successful, had decided +upon an immediate invasion of Hungary. The Cossacks had been called to +lead the dash over the Carpathians into the heart of the enemy's +territory. + +Hal and Chester had an audience of the Grand Duke. The latter summoned +them to his quarters to offer an apology for his hasty action in +ordering them shot some days before. Also he talked a little of the +proposed invasion. + +"Sixty thousand Cossack cavalry will be the advance guard," he informed +them. "Behind these will come the infantry in great force. I plan to +have a million men in Hungary within two months. If we are successful in +forcing a passage of the mountains, and I am sure we shall be, Budapest +will be at our mercy, with Vienna as the next goal. + +"In the meantime the Poland campaign will be pressed, that the Germans +may be unable to go to the aid of the Austrians in the south. The thing +that I fear now is that Turkey may be drawn into the war on the side of +the German emperor. The Kaiser has brought great pressure to bear upon +them, and I fear that they cannot long be kept neutral." + +"What effect would that have upon the invasion of Hungary?" questioned +Chester. + +"It would unquestionably delay it for days, possibly weeks. While we are +prepared for the Turks, nevertheless it would probably necessitate the +sending of reënforcements toward the border, and naturally I should have +to draw upon the forces I am now sending into Hungary." + +"I see," replied Chester. "But the Turk, as a fighting man, doesn't +amount to much, as I understand it." + +"In the recent Balkan war they did not show much fighting prowess, it is +true," said the Grand Duke, "but officered by Germans, and under German +discipline, there may be a different story to tell." + +"But there is no danger of their affecting the ultimate outcome of the +war?" asked Hal. + +"None," was the confident reply. "What it will mean, however, is that +Turkey, as a nation, will be wiped off the map of Europe, and, possibly, +of Asia also." + +"The sooner the better," was Hal's comment. + +The Grand Duke smiled. + +"It may take time," he said, "but it will be done just so surely as +Turkey casts in her fortunes with Germany." + +After some further talk the lads left the Grand Duke's tent, and +rejoined their regiment. Everything was now practically ready for the +advance to the southward, and the troops were eagerly awaiting the word +that was to send them into the Carpathians, to strike a decisive blow at +the Austrians. + +And the word was given early the following morning. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + +RAIDING. + + +At a fierce gallop the troop of Cossacks bore down upon the little +mountain town--firing at a detachment of Austrian soldiers who ventured +forth to give them battle--without checking their speed. This band of +Cossacks, reconnoitering well ahead of the main advance guard, was +probably 1,000 strong; the Austrians opposing them much less. With the +rapidly advancing Russians were Hal, Chester and Alexis. + +The advance of the Czar's troops to the Carpathians had been without +incident. Whenever troops of the enemy had opposed them they had been +put to flight without difficulty. The cavalry, dashing rapidly ahead, +had outdistanced their cavalry and artillery support, and the entire +force of mounted men--60,000 of them--were in the midst of the wild +mountains. + +Harassed from front and, now that they had advanced well into the +mountains, also from the sides and rear, the Cossacks nevertheless +pushed on. From behind rocks and trees, isolated bands of Austrians +fired upon them, doing great execution, disappearing in the hills when +the Cossacks turned upon them. + +The reconnoitering force to which the lads were attached dashed down +upon the little mountain town, the sun gleaming on their lances and +revolver barrels. In vain did the Austrian officers urge their men to +stand firm. After one volley at the approaching horsemen, they broke and +fled, scattering in all directions. The very name, Cossack, spread +terror. + +Right into the middle of the little village dashed the troop. Now from +every window came a hail of lead, and the Cossacks, apparently trapped, +turned this way and that, not knowing which way to go. Struck by a rifle +bullet, the officer in command threw up his hands and toppled from his +horse. Quickly Alexis sprang to the head of the men, Hal and Chester +beside him. + +"Dismount!" cried Alexis. + +The cavalrymen threw themselves from their horses, and at a second +command, rushed directly upon the houses. With heavy kicks they smashed +in the doors and rushed upon the occupants within. They soon put an end +to these snipers. + +But now, around one side of the town appeared a troop of Austrian horse. + +Hal raised a cry of warning, and quickly the Cossacks turned and leaped +upon their own horses; but the Austrian cavalry had no mind to give +battle to their foes, and after pouring in a volley, turned and fled +down the narrow mountain pass. + +"After them!" cried Alexis. + +He put spurs to his horse and dashed ahead, his men following closely. + +The Austrians had not gone far when their leader called a halt and +consulted with his subordinate officer. They were, the leader knew, not +far from a point where he could expect reënforcements. + +A plan was quickly formed. The Austrians divided into two parts. The +foremost blocked the road--down which the Cossacks were rapidly +approaching--near a turn, so as to remain unseen by the approaching +enemy until almost the moment of contact. The second force stayed some +rods behind the first, forming in two lines, one along each side of the +road. Some were armed with lances and sabers, but many also carried +rifles. + +As for the Cossacks, all carried lances and revolvers. + +The Russians went forward at a gallop. Alexis was expecting to overtake +the enemy, but he was hardly prepared for the suddenness of the +encounter. + +Ere he could give an order, there came one loud, flaming, whistling +discharge from that living barrier drawn up across the road. Alexis' +horse reared, as did others of the troop. Some of the men came to a +quick stop, others were borne forward by the impetus of their former +speed, but reined in for orders. No man fell, though one groaned and two +hurled epithets at the foe. + +Alexis, now that he had his horse under control, drew his sword with his +right hand, his pistol with his left, which also held the rein, and +ordered his men to charge, to fire at the moment of contact, then to +cut, slash and club. + +The first line of Austrians, as soon as they had fired, retreated +between the two lines of supports, stopping at some further distance to +reform. The second line, being thus cleared of the first, poured a hail +of bullets into the Cossacks as the latter were caught between them. + +Many fell, but the others turned on the second barrier with furious +force, some, however, rushing upon the reforming first line. + +They were the best riders in the world, and many a one of them held his +lance aloft in one hand, his revolver raised in the other, the rein +loose on his horse's neck. + +The Austrians and Alexis' foremost men fired at the same moment. The +Austrians had not time to turn and flee, for the Cossacks, unchecked by +this second greeting of fire, came on at headlong speed. + +"At 'em, boys!" cried Hal excitedly, firing his revolver at a tall +Austrian officer, who fell sidewise from his horse. + +An Austrian officer struck with a sword at Chester's left arm, but only +knocked the pistol from his hand. The lad found himself threatened on +the right by a trooper, and slashed at him with his sword. The blow went +home, but the sword's end became entangled with the victim's breast +knot. A second trooper brought his rifle butt down heavily upon the +sword, and it snapped off. + +Chester felt a keen smart in his left leg. It came from a second sword +blow aimed by the Austrian officer, who might have followed it with a +third, but that he was now attacked elsewhere. Chester had no sooner +clapped his hand to his wounded leg than he was stunned by a blow from +the rifle butt of the trooper who had previously struck the sword. He +fell forward on his horse's neck, which he grasped madly with both arms. + +Still holding the broken sword in his right hand, Chester now lapsed +from a sense of the tumult, the plunging and shrieking horses, the whir +and clash of swords, the thuds of rifle blows, into half consciousness, +while the unguided horse turned suddenly and made off in the direction +from which he had come. + +Meanwhile the Cossacks had been pushing the Austrians back. Hal and +Alexis, fighting side by side, were so far unharmed. Right into the +midst of the enemy they plunged, and for several minutes could see +nothing but flying swords and lances. Then, at a signal, the Austrians +turned and fled. + +Hal turned to speak to Chester, but the latter was not there. In alarm, +he called Alexis' attention to the fact that Chester was missing. +Quickly Alexis ordered a halt and looked around. Bodies strewed the +road, and leaping from their horses, the two investigated. Chester was +not there. + +"Great Scott!" exclaimed Hal. "What can have happened to him?" + +Alexis questioned his men. One remembered that a great black charger had +dashed through the troop in the midst of the battle and had fled to the +rear. He remembered that a form was upon the animal's back. + +"It must have been Chester," said Hal to Alexis. "Do you go on in +pursuit of the Austrians, and I will go back and see if I can find him." + +"Good," said Alexis. "The horse probably will run back to the main +column. You should not have much trouble finding him." + +With a word of command Alexis ordered the troop ahead, and Hal started +back on the trail of his chum. + +When Chester was again aware of things he was still clasping the horse's +neck and was being borne along he knew not whither. His head ached and +his left leg pained him greatly. He was dizzy and too weak to raise +himself from his position. He could not hear any sound of fighting. He +tried to sit up and look around, but this added to his pain, so he fell +forward on the neck of his horse again. + +Suddenly the horse stopped. + +Once more Chester tried to sit up. This time he was successful, and in +spite of the pain glanced about him. The horse had halted near a little +house, set back some fifty feet from the road, and even as he looked up +a woman came from the doorway. She started in astonishment at the sight +of the horse and its wounded rider, and hastened back into the house. +She reappeared in a moment, however, accompanied by a second woman, the +latter armed with a huge revolver. + +The two now approached the lad and lifted him from the horse. They +supported him as he dragged himself into the house, and dropped weakly +into a chair. Then the women stepped back and pointed the revolver at +him. + +"You shall remain here," she said, "until I can turn you over to the +Austrians." + +Chester was somewhat surprised. By the assistance given him by the +women, he had thought that, after resting up, he would be allowed to +rejoin his friends; but the set expression on the woman's face told the +lad that she meant what she said. + +The second woman approached with water and bandages and soon bound up +his wounds. Then the lad was escorted to another room, which looked out +upon the road. The woman mounted guard over him with her revolver. + +"Some of our troops will be here before long," she told him. "Until then +I shall guard you." + +All this time Chester retained his hold on the broken sword. Suddenly, +down the road, came the sound of a galloping horse. Chester glanced +through the window and in a moment he had made out the figure of Hal. +Quickly he stepped to the window, and before his captor could prevent +him, shattered the window pane with his broken sword. + +"Hal!" he cried at the top of his voice. "Hal! Here I am, wounded and a +prisoner!" + +The woman hurled herself upon the lad and bore him back out of sight. In +his weakened condition he was no match for her. She thrust him back into +the chair. He turned his eyes to the window. Hal had passed on. + +"Great Scott!" ejaculated Chester. "He didn't hear me!" + +But Hal had heard. He recognized the sound of his friend's voice, and +realized that he was in trouble of some kind. Likewise he surmised what +the trouble was, for he knew that they were in the heart of a hostile +country. Therefore, he did not check the speed of his horse at once, but +rode some distance further before drawing rein. Then he dismounted and +tied his horse to a sapling. + +Springing in among the trees, he advanced cautiously toward the house. +Both women, secure in the belief that he had passed on, turned to taunt +Chester. The latter shut his lips grimly and refused to make a reply. + +Suddenly, from the next room, came a tremendous clattering of pots and +pans. + +Both women jumped to their feet. + +"There is someone out there!" cried one of the women excitedly. + +With her revolver pointed straight before her she moved softly toward +the door. At the same moment Chester realized Hal's ruse and cried: + +"Look out, Hal!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + +AT BAY IN THE PASS. + + +When Hal, after creeping into the house through a window, had +inadvertently bumped into several pots and pans, knocking them to the +floor with a clatter, he drew his revolver and stood stockstill. He +heard Chester's cry of warning, and, realizing that an enemy was +approaching, he drew a bead upon the doorway. + +An arm with a pistol appeared through the opening; there was a flash of +fire and a bullet sped past him. He fired quickly in return, and the +weapon of his unseen enemy dropped to the floor with a crash, followed +by a shrill scream of pain. + +"Great Scott, a woman!" cried Hal and leaped forward. + +But the woman was more frightened than hurt. Realizing that she was +uninjured, as Hal came toward her, she leaped forward and threw her arms +about him, pinioning the lad's hand that held his revolver to his side. +At the same moment she cried out to her companion: + +"Quick! Pick up the revolver and shoot him while I hold him!" + +Hal realized that he was in grave danger and struggled fiercely to free +his hands. But his adversary was a very powerful woman, and having +gained a secure hold, Hal was unable to free himself. + +The woman who had been left to guard Chester, at the command of the +other, ran to her aid. Chester, holding to the back of the chair, drew +himself to his feet and staggered after her, still clinging to his +broken sword. + +As the woman stooped to pick up the revolver dropped by the other when +Hal's bullet had struck her hand, Chester, in spite of the pain of his +wounds, leaped forward. As she arose to her feet and would have fired +point-blank at Hal, he knocked the weapon from her hand with a sharp +blow of his broken sword. + +Then coming quickly to Hal's side he took the lad's revolver from him, +and, stepping back, aimed it at the head of the woman with whom his +friend was struggling. + +"Release him instantly," he ordered, "or I shall fire!" + +The woman glanced at him over her shoulder, and smiled tauntingly. + +"You wouldn't shoot a woman," she sneered. + +"I wouldn't like to," replied Chester, "but if you have not released him +and if both of you do not line up against that wall with your hands in +the air by the time I count three, I will shoot, just as surely as I +stand here. One, two----" + +The woman glanced at him. Her eyes must have told her that the lad meant +what he said, for, releasing Hal, she stepped quickly back and raised +her hands in the air. The second woman followed her example. Chester +stepped to Hal's side, and extended the revolver to him. + +"Take this quick!" he commanded. + +Hal did so, and without another word, Chester suddenly crumpled up in a +heap on the floor. He had fainted. + +Still covering the women with his revolver, Hal knelt by his friend's +side. Then he turned to the woman. + +"Some water!" he commanded. + +Under the threatening muzzle of the revolver, the woman brought it, and +at a command from Hal, bathed Chester's face. Then, still at Hal's +command, she lifted the lad and placed him in a chair. Hal took his seat +near the window, for he knew that it was only a question of time until +some of the Russian troops passed in one way or the other. His revolver +still covered the two women, who sat without uttering a word. + +Gradually the color returned to Chester's face, and at last he opened +his eyes and looked about. He took in the situation at a glance, and +smiled faintly. + +"Well, I see we won," he said. + +"We did," replied Hal grimly. "How do you feel?" + +"Better. I shall be all right now." + +"Do you think you are equal to holding this revolver while I go out and +reconnoiter?" + +"Sure!" replied Chester. "Give it to me." + +Hal put the revolver in his friend's hand. + +"Don't hesitate to fire if one of them makes a false move," he said. +"They would kill you in a moment if they had the chance." + +"I'll use it if necessary; have no fear about that," replied Chester. + +Hal arose and left the room and the house. He gazed up and down the +road. There was no sign of troops, nor, by listening intently, could he +hear hoof beats. He made his way to where he had left his horse, and +tied it alongside the horse that had brought Chester to the house. Then +he returned to Chester and his prisoners. + +"There is no telling how long we may have to wait for our men to +return," he said to his friend. "Do you suppose that if I lifted you up +on your horse you could ride?" + +"I am sure of it," replied Chester. + +"That is the best plan," said Hal. "Come, then, we will try it." + +He went to Chester's side, and still holding the revolver in his right +hand, threw his left arm around his friend's neck. Chester put an arm +about Hal's shoulder, and thus supported, made his way from the room +without much pain. + +Hal made a stirrup of his hand, and Chester, putting his foot into it, +was soon astride his horse, though he winced somewhat with the pain the +exertion gave him. Then Hal sprang into his own saddle, and the two +turned their horses' heads in the direction of the main body of +Cossacks. + +Along the narrow mountain trail they rode slowly for perhaps an hour +without the sight of either friend or foe. Then, rounding a sharp +turning in the pass, at the top of a steep section of the road, Hal +reined in suddenly with a muttered imprecation. Chester followed his +friend's example. + +Perhaps half a mile away came a body of horsemen, perhaps twenty of +them. The sun, shining upon their uniforms, showed them to be Austrians. +Quickly Hal leaped from his horse, and putting forth his utmost +strength, rolled several great stones into place across the road, +absolutely barring the pass. Then, after Chester had been helped to the +ground, the two lads dropped behind this barrier. + +The pass at this point was hardly wide enough for four men to walk +abreast. On each side walls of rock rose straight up for perhaps twenty +feet. Hal looked at his two revolvers and the one he had taken from the +women in the house. + +"Lucky we have plenty of ammunition," he said calmly. + +He tested all weapons carefully and loaded them. Then he passed one to +Chester. + +"I am keeping two," he explained, "because, being wounded, you probably +won't be able to move about as quickly as I will. I don't know how long +we shall be able to hold these fellows off; but if they don't rush us, +we may be able to hold out till help arrives." + +"If they were Germans I wouldn't feel quite so easy," said Chester; "but +I don't believe there is much likelihood of Austrians rushing us." + +"Right you are," said Hal cheerfully. "They'll probably dismount, hide +behind their horses and try to pick us off." + +As yet the Austrians were unaware of the presence of enemies in the pass +above them. They came on slowly, laughing and talking. Then one, +chancing to raise his head, saw the barrier in the pass. He called the +attention of the others to it. No sign of an enemy was visible, but the +Austrians approached very carefully. + +The two lads waited until the Austrians were so close that a miss was +impossible, then, taking deliberate aim, each fired once. Two of the +enemy fell to the roadside. + +There came a cry of dismay from the Austrians, and they reined in their +horses and sprang to the ground. + +But two of them had not been quick enough, and while they left their +horses at practically the same time as did the others, they did not rise +again to their feet. + +"Four!" said Chester calmly. + +"About ten, if Alexis were doing the counting," said Hal grimly. "But I +would give a whole lot if he were here right now." + +The Austrians forced their horses to lie down, and took up their +positions behind them. Then they blazed away wildly at the barrier +ahead. They could see nothing at which to shoot, however, and their +bullets did no damage. + +"I wonder if the Austrians know this old hat trick?" said Chester. + +Picking up a little stick, he put his cap upon it and raised it slowly +over the barrier. A hail of bullets flew about it. Chester took +deliberate aim at one of the Austrians who exposed himself, and Hal at +another. Again their revolvers cracked once each, and two Austrians bit +the dust. + +"We'll be on even terms soon, if we keep this up," said Hal gleefully. + +Chester tried the cap trick again; but this time it did not work. The +Austrians had learned a lesson. + +For perhaps five minutes there was silence; then Hal, glancing quickly +over the barrier, saw one of the enemy jump to his feet and dash +straight toward the barrier. In his anxiety to pick the man off, Hal +fired too quickly, and missed. + +The man dashed on and flung himself to the ground right up against the +barrier. Here, for the moment, he was safe, for the lads could not get +at him without leaning over the barrier and thus exposing themselves to +the fire of the others. + +A second Austrian leaped to his feet and dashed forward. This time, +however, Hal did not hurry, and picked the man off with ease. Hardly had +his weapon spoken, when a shot from below went whizzing by his head. Hal +tumbled back to safety rapidly. + +"Great Scott!" he exclaimed. "We'll have to get that fellow away from +there. He almost got me that time." + +"Yes; but how?" demanded Chester. + +Hal considered the situation for some moments in silence. Then he passed +one of his two revolvers to Chester. + +"You blaze away as rapidly as you can at the Austrians with those two +guns," he said. "Never mind whether you see anything to shoot at or not. +Just shoot when I give the word. That'll keep those fellows under cover. +I'll attend to this one." + +"What are you going to do?" asked Chester. + +"I'm going over after him!" said Hal grimly. + +"But he is liable to kill you!" exclaimed Chester in alarm. + +"If I don't get him," said Hal quietly, "he is sure to kill us both +before long. Here goes!" + +At the moment that he sprang to the top of the barrier, Chester opened +upon the Austrians with both weapons. The man on the opposite side of +the barrier was taken by surprise by Hal's sudden action. Hal toppled +over upon him without warning. With a startled cry the Austrian raised +his weapon to fire, but Hal was too quick for him. + +His revolver, less than a foot from the man's head, spoke sharply. Hal +waited long enough to see that the work had been well done, then rose to +his feet, placed his hand upon the barrier, and, amid a hail of bullets +from the other Austrians, vaulted back to safety. + +"I got him!" he told Chester quietly, as he turned and emptied his own +revolver at the enemy, who seemed on the point of rushing forward. + +Quickly Chester reloaded his own revolvers, and it was well that he did +so, for the enemy seemed to be manifesting a desire to come forward to +the attack, apparently believing that the lads were out of ammunition. + +The lads had now accounted for eight of the enemy, but they were not so +foolish as to believe that the Austrians would remain in their present +position and be picked off one at a time. + +"They'll make a rush soon!" declared Chester. + +"Well," replied Hal, "when they do we'll be ready for 'em. We can shoot +straighter than they can while they are on the run. We should be able to +pick off two more each before they get here." + +"We'll have a try at it," said Chester simply. + +It was plainly evident that the Austrians were preparing for a move of +some kind. Suddenly, at a given signal, all twelve of the foe still +alive, sprang to their feet and made a concerted rush toward the +barrier. + +"Here they come!" cried Hal. "Steady now!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + +IN THE NICK OF TIME. + + +Hal, at the right of the barrier, confined his attention to that side of +the road, leaving Chester to deal with the enemy rushing forward on the +left. Three times the weapon of each lad spoke, and at each shot an +Austrian fell to the ground. Firing coolly and deliberately at such +close quarters, a miss was absolutely impossible. + +But the lads did not have time to fire again. The enemy was at the +barrier; but, instead of hurling themselves over it, as both lads had +expected they would, they dropped to the ground on the opposite side of +the big rocks, and there they remained. + +It was indeed a peculiar situation--the enemies less than six feet +apart, separated only by a few rocks. Still the Austrians, in spite of +their losses, outnumbered the lads three to one. + +Now the rocks of the barrier began to move inward toward the lads. + +"Great Scott!" cried Chester. "They are trying to push these rocks over +on us. If they tumble this barrier over, we can't hope to account for +all six of them." + +The lads braced themselves against the rocks; but the strength of the +two was not as great as the strength of the six. Such a contest could +have but one ending. The boys realized this as well as did their foes. + +"Well," said Hal calmly, "it looks as though they had us. All ready for +a last stand, Chester?" + +"All ready," replied Chester calmly. + +"When I say jump," instructed Hal, "leap backward!" + +Chester nodded in understanding of this plan. + +"Now!" cried Hal. "Jump!" + +Both lads leaped quickly backward, and as they did so, the +barrier--freed of their supporting shoulders--tumbled inward, while the +six Austrians sprawled on the ground. For a moment the lads had the +advantage and they made the best of it. + +Hal's revolver spoke and one Austrian straightened out in the act of +rising. Chester accounted for another, and then both lads sprang in +close upon the foe, thus precluding the use of the foe's firearms. + +Hal, grappling with two of the enemy, was giving a good account of +himself; but Chester, weak from the loss of blood, was unable to hold +his own. A blow from the butt of one of the Austrian's revolvers and he +went to the ground. + +At that moment, from their rear, came the sound of rapidly galloping +hoofs. Around the bend some distance away dashed a troop of Cossacks, +Alexis himself at their head. The giant Cossack took in the situation +with one comprehensive glance and put spurs to his horse. The two +Austrians who had attacked Chester saw the advancing Cossacks, and, +turning, took to their heels. + +The two with whom Hal struggled, however, were too busily occupied to +notice the approach of reënforcements and sorely, each trying to bring +his revolver to bear. + +Alexis now jumped from his horse and dashed forward toward the three. He +stretched forth two mighty hands and plucked the Austrians off the lad. +Raising each high in the air, he stretched wide his arms, and then +brought them together with great force. There was a crunch as the heads +of the two met with terrific force. Then they hung limp in the giant's +hands. He hurled them from him with a disdainful gesture, and, snatching +his revolver from its holster, dropped to his knee and fired two shots +in quick succession at the two remaining enemy, who were fleeing down +the road. + +His aim was true, and as the last of the Austrians bit the dust, Alexis +turned to where Chester lay and picked him up gently in his arms. From +his canteen he poured water over the lad's face and soon came signs of +returning consciousness. Then he laid him gently on the ground and +turned to Hal. + +He gazed first at the lad, then at the dead bodies of the enemy and then +back to Hal. + +"Hm-m-m," he said gruffly. "Quite a fight. But where would you have been +if Alexis had not arrived so opportunely?" + +"Dead, I guess," replied Hal quietly. "We owe you our lives, but there +is no need to tell you that we are grateful." + +"Not a bit," said Alexis. "Thanks from one brave man to another are +never necessary; but did you see how easily I disposed of those four +Austrians?" + +"It was very pretty," replied Hal. + +"Wasn't it?" cried the giant gleefully. "Still, it was a trifle. I +remember the time that I----" + +Hal walked over to Chester's side and bent down and so did not hear the +story of Alexis' might. The giant looked sorrowfully after him for a +moment, muttered to himself and then he walked after him. + +Chester now sat up and looked about. His eyes rested on the dead bodies. + +"Looks like Alexis had been here," he muttered, for he had not yet seen +the giant. + +Alexis heard him and his face glowed with pleasure. + +"He is here," he said, stepping forward. + +Chester's face lighted up. + +"By Jove!" he exclaimed. "It is good to see you. We have wished several +times in the last hour that you were with us. We needed you badly. +However, you arrived just in time." + +Alexis blushed like a schoolboy, for he was not used to hearing others +praise his prowess. + +"Yes, I did arrive in the nick of time," he said awkwardly. "But come, +we must get away from here." + +"Have you learned the strength of the enemy in the mountains?" asked Hal +a few minutes later, as they rode along down the pass. + +"I learned enough to make sure that, without infantry and artillery +support, the cavalry will probably be annihilated," replied Alexis +briefly. "By a dash, we might be able to reach the plains of Hungary, +but without support we should end our days there. I shall counsel +retreat." + +"But I thought you would never counsel retreat?" said Hal, smiling. + +"For myself, never!" replied the giant. "But there are more lives than +mine depending upon this. Therefore I say retreat." + +Alexis was as good as his word. Upon their return to the main column, +Alexis was called into consultation with the commanding officer. He +recounted what he had learned, and urged that the retreat be begun at +once. + +"There are half a million men in these hills," he informed his +commander, "and they are trying to draw us on. We will be allowed to go +so far, and then they will close in on us. One hundred or two hundred +thousand, I don't mind. We could whip them with ease; but half a million +are too many for sixty thousand. If we had not outdistanced our infantry +and artillery, we might do it, but without them, no." + +"Still," said the commanding officer, "I have set my heart on striking +one more blow at the enemy. Would you counsel against it?" + +"I am always in favor of striking one more blow at the enemy," replied +Alexis. "I suppose I should counsel against it, but I will not." + +"Good!" exclaimed his commander. "One decisive blow to the enemy in the +hills, and then we shall fall back into Galicia. Now, where are the +Austrians massed?" + +"It will be extremely hazardous," said Alexis slowly, "but I guess it +can be done. Fifteen miles straight along this mountain pass you come to +a small plateau. I advanced that far myself. Encamped there are in the +neighborhood of one hundred thousand of the enemy. By a quick and silent +dash and a night attack, we may be able to deal them a crushing blow; +but even so, we must fall back immediately. Even then we shall be +greatly harassed by the foe." + +"Well," said the commander, "we shall make the attack, come what may +afterward." + +Alexis saluted his commander and returned to where he had left the two +lads, where he repeated his interview. Then he turned to Chester. + +"It is too bad," he said, "that you will be unable to take part in the +battle." + +"But I shall take part in it," exclaimed the lad. "You don't think I am +going to sit idle while there is fighting going on, do you?" + +"I am afraid you cannot help yourself," replied Hal. "You will go with +the advance, of course; but you will be kept well in the rear." + +In vain did Chester protest. His commanding officer overruled all of his +complaints, and at last the lad was forced to make his way to the rear +of the Russian army. All that day the army rested, and it was not until +the following afternoon that the signal was given for the advance, for +the Russian commander had so timed his movement that he would come upon +the enemy after nightfall. + +It was indeed an imposing sight, these 60,000 men, able to march +scarcely six abreast through the narrow mountain pass, moving hurriedly +through the midst of the wild Carpathians. For miles they stretched out, +but they advanced rapidly, and long before night the advance guard was +within sight of the Austrian position. + +This was made known to the Russian commander by his scouts; and still +out of sight, the Cossacks halted. + +The pass was considerably wider here, and the men spread out somewhat. +Outposts were thrown out to guard against a counter surprise attack, and +the men allowed to lie down and rest. + +The battle formation was preserved, however, and the men fell to sleep +upon their arms, each and every one ready to spring up and dash forward +at a moment's notice. + +And still the Austrians were unaware of their approach. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + +THE SURPRISE. + + +Stealthily the vanguard of the Cossacks crept forward afoot. They had +dismounted that they might approach the enemy with less danger of being +heard. Naked blades were held firmly in their hands; revolvers and hand +grenades were ready. The night attack of the Cossacks was under way. + +Not a shot had been fired. Silently they stole on toward the sleeping +Austrian camp. Feeling perfectly secure in the mountain fastness and +believing their position practically impregnable, the Austrians failed +to keep vigilant watch. + +Now the first line of Cossacks, at a whispered word of command, fell to +the ground on their faces. A sentry walked directly toward them, but in +the blackness of the night he did not make out the silent forms. + +As he turned his back on them, one shadowy form rose quickly to his feet +and moved swiftly forward. There was the sound of a brief struggle, a +cry stifled in his throat and the Cossacks moved forward again. + +A second and then a third time this operation was repeated. Three +Austrian sentinels lay dead upon the ground; still the camp slept on, +unsuspecting. + +More swiftly now, other troops issued from the mountain pass and spread +out in a great semi-circle over the plateau. For two hours this movement +continued in the darkness. The first line of Cossacks stood ready to +fire at the first sign of discovery, but, undiscovered, waited for the +rest of the force to get in position. + +A dog in the Austrian camp barked. Others took up the cry. A sentry, +aware of some strange sensation, fired his rifle in the air. At the +moment the last of the Cossacks issued from the mountain pass. These +last troops were mounted and stood with bared lances awaiting the word +to charge. + +The huge Austrian camp stirred along its length, but at that instant the +Cossacks sprang to action. Came quick commands from the officers, and +the first line moved upon the Austrian camp at a dead run. A hail of +revolver bullets sped through the canvas of the tents, striking down +those who were yet asleep and reaping a toll of death among those who +were dashing to arms. Then the Cossacks charged with cold steel. + +In little parties, without the semblance of formation or discipline, the +Austrians dashed from their tents to beat back this sudden attack. There +was no time for them to fall into position. The Cossacks were upon them. +Right into the heart of the enemy's camp rushed the fearless horde in a +terrible charge, cutting, slashing, hewing their way through. + +The Austrians, caught unprepared, gave ground. The Cossacks followed up +their first advantage closely, pressing the enemy so that they had no +time to get into battle formation. A squad of Cossacks sprang toward a +battery of field pieces, quickly wheeled it into position, and opened +fire on the fleeing Austrians. The execution was fearful. Men went down +in heaps, and those that survived fled faster than before. + +The surprise was complete. A terrible confusion reigned among the enemy. +The Russians pursued them relentlessly. Here and there men threw down +their arms and surrendered by the hundreds. + +Other mountain batteries now had been seized by the Cossacks and turned +upon the foe. For a mile the Cossacks pursued the beaten enemy; then +drew off as suddenly as they had come. Prisoners were abandoned. Quickly +the big guns were put out of commission, and the advance guard--now the +rearguard--fell back slowly, protecting the retreat of those in front. + +In almost less time than it takes to tell it, the Cossacks were again in +the saddle and dashing back down the mountain pass. + +The Austrians, for a moment, were unable to form in solid ranks. But, at +length, under the command of their officers, they formed and gave chase. +But the Cossacks had too great a start. The losses of the Austrians had +been terrible, those of the Cossacks comparatively slight. In spite of +the fact that they had been in the midst of the fighting, Hal and Alexis +had escaped without injury. + +Now the Austrian cavalry, having had time to form, scattered on each +side of the pass and rode after the Cossacks. They came up with the rear +guard, and from the sides poured in bullets, until they were forced to +draw rein because of the treacherous nature of the ground on either +hand. It was here that the Cossacks sustained their heaviest losses. + +But the raid had been a success; there could be no doubt about that. + +The Russian commander was elated as, in the midst of his men, he ordered +the retreat; but as the retreat continued, it became more hazardous. +Even as Alexis had predicted, the mountains swarmed with the enemy, who +rained bullets upon the Russian columns from every hand. + +In spite of this, however, by noon of the following day the Cossacks had +reached the spot from which they had started the day before; and here a +halt was called. Videttes were placed and the troops settled down for a +brief rest. While they made a good mark for the guerillas, they +nevertheless were in too great force to permit of an attack in force. + +Night fell, and once more the troops sprang to the saddle and continued +their retreat. Morning found the vanguard well out of the mountains on +the plains of Galicia, and soon the last of the rear guard had issued +from the pass. Then the mighty columns spread out. There was no pursuit, +and the commander ordered the retreat conducted more slowly. + +Two days later the columns of raiding Cossacks rode in among the Russian +troop besieging the Galician city of Cracow. Here the commander decided +to remain until he should receive instructions from the Grand Duke. He +dispatched Chester, who had now recovered sufficiently from his wounds +as to be feeling perfectly fit, Hal and Alexis to carry word of the +expedition to the Grand Duke. So the three friends again set out upon a +journey. + +They traveled without haste and without incident and at length found +themselves once more in Lodz. Here all three reported to the Russian +commander-in-chief. After receiving his congratulations, and while they +yet stood in his presence, there came a terrible roar from outside the +tent. + +The Grand Duke listened intently. Thousands upon thousands of voices +rose on the air. They were cheering. Thousands upon thousands of voices +took up the cry: + +"God save the Czar!" + +The Grand Duke advanced rapidly toward the entrance to his tent. The two +lads and the giant Cossack made as if to depart; but the Grand Duke, +with a movement of his hand, signified for them to stay and so they +remained. + +The sound of cheering drew nearer. The Grand Duke left the tent, and +through the door the lads could see him standing with bared head. Came +the sound of galloping hoofs, and a cavalry troop drew up at the Grand +Duke's tent. The latter stepped forward, and giving his hand to a +brilliantly uniformed man, assisted him to dismount. Then, bowing low, +he escorted his visitor into his tent. + +As they appeared in the small enclosure Alexis fell upon his knee, and +bowed till his head all but touched the ground. + +Nicholas, the Czar of all the Russias, turned toward the three with a +question on his lips. But the Grand Duke spoke first: + +"These, sire, are three of your majesty's bravest soldiers, who have +only now returned from a successful raid into the heart of the +Carpathians." + +The Czar glanced at the two lads. + +"But these," he said, pointing his finger at Hal and Chester, "are not +Russians." + +"No, sire," replied the Grand Duke. "They are American lads; but they +have rendered invaluable services to our cause," and while the lads +stood listening, he gave the Czar a brief account of some of their +experiences. + +The Czar advanced and placed a hand upon the shoulder of each. + +"I am glad," he said in perfect English, "to know you; and I envy my +cousin George the services of such gallant youths." + +Both lads bowed in acknowledgment of this compliment, and the Czar +turned to Alexis, who was still kneeling. + +"And this man," he said, "surely he is one of my Cossacks?" + +"Yes, your majesty," replied the Grand Duke. "There is not a braver in +the whole army," and he related some of Alexis' feats, as told him days +before by Hal and Chester. + +The Czar stretched forth a hand to Alexis, and the latter kissed it. + +"You shall be remembered," said the Russian monarch. + +Alexis' face glowed with pleasure. He was so taken by surprise that he +was unable to speak. + +The Grand Duke now signified that the three might leave the tent, and +they accordingly bowed themselves out. Outside Alexis could restrain +himself no longer. + +"I told you I was a brave man!" he cried; "but I am even braver than I +thought. I have been addressed by the Czar!" + +An officer entered the Grand Duke's tent, and departed a moment later in +great haste. A second later and the shrill call of a bugle carried +through the town. It was the order for inspection. The Czar was about to +review his troops. + +An hour later Czar Nicholas stood before his army, or such a part of it +as could be crowded in the plain before the Grand Duke's tent. Far out +it stretched on all sides. In a short address, in which he praised his +troops for their gallantry in action, the Czar predicted that success +would eventually crown the Russian arms. Then he turned to an officer of +the Grand Duke's staff and gave a command. + +Immediately the latter approached Hal, Chester and Alexis, who, being +apart from their regiments, stood a little to one side watching the +ceremonies. + +"Follow me!" he commanded. + +Without a word the three obeyed. Straight to the Czar the officer led +the way, the two lads and the Cossack wondering what it was all about. +In front of the Russian monarch the officer withdrew, leaving them alone +before the Czar. + +The Russian ruler stepped between the three, with a smile on his face +drew something from his pocket, approached each in turn and pinned +something on his breast. + +Alexis, Hal and Chester let their eyes drop to these objects, and all +three cried out in surprise. + +For the Czar of Russia, there in the presence of the army of Poland, +before the Grand Duke and other Russian nobles and dignitaries, with the +eyes of the entire assemblage focused upon them, had pinned upon the +breasts of the two American lads and the giant Cossack the Cross of the +Order of St. George! + +It was their reward for bravery, and a great cheer went up from the +assembled hosts. + + + + +CHAPTER XXV. + +A NEW MISSION. + + +The two lads were again having an audience of the Grand Duke. The +latter, after ordering them to bear word to the commander of the Cossack +force that had invaded the Carpathians to remain before Cracow until +further notice, had also proposed a new mission to the lads. + +"I would like to learn," he said, "whether there is any truth in the +report that, in the event we capture Cracow, the population of Galicia +will come to our support and throw off the Austrian yoke. Of course I +have heard these rumors from apparently reliable sources, but I would +prefer to know the truth from someone I can trust implicitly." + +"We shall be glad to undertake that mission, Your Excellency," said Hal. +"I believe that by using a little strategy we can gain entrance to the +city. It would probably be easier for us than for one of your own men, +because we are Americans and may be able to use that to advantage." + +"I had thought of that," replied the Grand Duke. "In fact, it is for +that reason that I selected you. I will give you a message to your +commander, relieving you from active duty. My advice is that you do not +take Alexis on this mission. He would probably hinder you." + +The boys saluted, and taking the paper the Grand Duke extended to them, +departed. On their way back toward Cracow they informed Alexis of their +mission and of the fact that he was not to accompany them. The Cossack +was disappointed and astonished. + +"Not take me!" he exclaimed in surprise. "Why, I am good for fifty men! +You know that!" + +"But this is not a case of strength and fighting," Hal explained. "This +is a case where strategy will count more than a hundred men." + +"Well," demanded Alexis, "am I not a strategist? Did you not tell me so +with your own lips? As a strategist there is none better than I. Why, I +can tell you how I----" + +"But, Alexis," Hal interrupted, "one look at you would tell an Austrian +your nationality. You cannot expect to fool them as we did the peasant +of the hills. I am sorry, but there is no help for it." + +Alexis was greatly crestfallen, but he admitted the truth of the boys' +reasoning. + +"It is true that anyone would know I am a Cossack," he replied, "but if +it came to a fight----" + +"If it comes to a fight," said Chester, "we shall miss you greatly; but +we shall have to try and get along without you this time." + +Back with their regiment they gave the message releasing them from +active duty to their commander; then, changing their uniforms for +civilian garb and bidding Alexis good-by, they set out in the direction +of the Galician stronghold, making a wide detour so as to approach from +the north, rather than from the direction of the Russian troops in the +East. + +They went horseback, and they rode slowly, for they did not wish to +attract undue attention to themselves by too great speed. The route they +traversed made it a good two-days' journey, and long before coming to +the city proper they encountered bands of Austrian troops. To these, +however, they paid little heed and they were not molested. + +"Evidently they don't care who goes in," remarked Chester. + +"Looks that way," replied Hal; "but I'll bet they pay strict attention +to anyone who tries to get out. That's where our hardest work probably +will come in." + +"I guess you are right," said Chester. + +Nevertheless they were halted by an Austrian patrol when close to the +city. To him, however, they explained that they were American tourists, +caught in Galicia at the outbreak of the war, and that they had +penetrated beyond the Austrian lines without being aware of it. + +"We want to get back to safety," Hal told him. + +The Austrian officer smiled and let them pass without further words. +Inside the Galician city the lads prowled about leisurely. The extreme +eastern end of the city was a mass of ruins. The shells hurled by the +big Russian guns had done great damage; but the flames had been +extinguished before they had reached the heart of the city, and as the +Russians had later fallen back a considerable distance the city now was +perfectly quiet. + +Night came on, and the lads sought shelter in the home of a Galician +peasant. The house was small but comfortable, and the old man who lived +in it admitted them without question. They repeated to him the story +told the Austrian officer, adding that the place in which they had been +staying had been destroyed by a Russian shell. + +"And your sympathies," inquired the old man, "are with the Austrians?" + +"Of course," replied Hal quietly, "Russian barbarism must be wiped out." + +"Good!" replied the old man. "I suppose you know there is considerable +sentiment in favor of the Russians, however?" + +"I have heard something to that effect; but I could scarcely credit it," +replied Hal guardedly. + +"Well," said the old man, "it is true. A plot was discovered not two +days ago to give the city into the hands of the Russians. The +conspirators were arrested right here in my house. They were friends of +mine. I was known to be loyal, and my false friends took advantage of +that fact to do their plotting here. Now my house is watched closely, +although they have hesitated to arrest me." + +The old man made the two comfortable for the night and left them. Before +preparing for bed the lads talked over what the old man had told them. +As they were getting ready to retire, they heard voices from an +adjoining room. + +Through a little hole in the wall they could see a stream of light. Hal +put his eye to the hole. In the room beyond he made out the figures of +two Austrian officers. Then the lad motioned to Chester to remain +silent, and laid his ear to the hole. + +"You are sure of this other plot?" came a voice. + +"Perfectly; but we will nip it in the bud. There is no question but the +people would welcome a Russian investment of the city. Galicia is +practically in sympathy with the Russians. We have been hard put to it +to keep them from rising and turning the city over to the Czar's +troops." + +"Well, I am sure we are equal to any occasion," said the first speaker. + +Hal turned away from the wall and repeated the conversation to Chester. + +"I guess that's all we need to know," he added. + +"I should say it is," was the reply. "Now the question is, how are we to +get back to our own lines?" + +"I have a plan that may work," said Hal. "It came to me a moment ago." + +"And that is?" prompted Chester. + +"Well," said Hal quietly, "we will exchange clothes with those two +officers in the next room." + +"Good!" cried Chester. + +"Let's start then." + +"Hadn't we better wait until they are asleep?" + +"No; I believe I have a better plan. Come with me." + +Quietly the two lads slipped from the room and down the little hall. +Then they turned and made their way back again, coming only as far as +the door to the Austrians' room. Hal opened it and walked in. At sight +of the two Austrian officers he drew back in well-simulated surprise. + +"I beg your pardon," he exclaimed. "I am in the wrong room." + +"Oh, that's all right," laughed one of the Austrians. "Are you the +Americans who are stopping here?" + +"Yes," replied Hal. + +"Well," said the Austrian. "It's early yet; come in and have a chat with +us. You can perhaps tell us some things about America that we would like +to know." + +Hal accepted the invitation, mentally congratulating himself upon their +good fortune. After a lengthy conversation, Hal rose to go. + +"It's getting late," he said. "Come, Chester, we may as well turn in." + +Chester also rose. In going to the door it was necessary for Hal to pass +behind one of the Austrians. As he did so, he quickly threw out a hand +and clutched the man by the throat. At the same moment Chester sprang +upon the second unsuspecting officer, and the cry that the latter would +have let out was stifled in his throat by the pressure of the lad's +fingers. + +Hal now produced a revolver, and Chester did likewise. They covered the +two officers. + +"One outcry and you are dead men," said Hal calmly. + +While Chester kept them covered, Hal bound and gagged them. Then the two +lads stripped them of their uniforms, which they donned themselves. +Feeling perfectly secure in these, the lads saw that the prisoners were +well tied and unable to cry out, and then left the room, shutting the +door behind them. + +In the hall they encountered their host, but the latter, recognizing the +Austrian uniform, did not even speak to them. The lads left the house +quietly, and turned their faces toward the north, intending to go back +by the way they had come. + +Several times they were spoken to by Austrian officers as they walked +along the streets, but to these salutations they made no reply, trusting +that their apparent rudeness would cast no suspicion upon them. And it +did not. + +At length they came to the farthest Austrian outpost, and here, for the +first time they were challenged. Hal stepped a little ahead of Chester +and spoke. + +"We are inspecting the lines," he said calmly. + +"You cannot pass here," came the reply. "My orders are to shoot anyone +who attempts to get by. The general himself couldn't pass. You will have +to go back." + +"Oh, all right, if that's the way you feel about it," said Hal, turning +his back upon the sentry. + +The sentry, believing that the lads would go away, lowered his rifle, +and in that moment Hal turned quickly again and sprang upon him. A quick +blow knocked the sentry from his feet, and the lads dashed forward. In +the distance Hal made out the form of several horses, and the lads ran +toward them. + +"Quick, Chester!" cried Hal. + +But the Austrian sentry had not been knocked unconscious. He was only +stunned. He staggered to his feet, brought his rifle to his shoulder and +fired. He was too unsteady to aim carefully, however, and the lads were +unhurt. + +But the sound of the shot aroused the Austrian camp. Men came rushing +forward. + +The boys leaped to the backs of two horses and spurred on. + +"It's a race for life, Hal!" shouted Chester, as the horses dashed +ahead. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + +A DASH FOR LIFE. + + +One glance over his shoulder convinced Hal that at least half a dozen of +the enemy had mounted and were spurring forward in pursuit. He passed +the word to Chester, and bending low in their saddles, the lads urged +their horses to greater efforts. + +From ahead suddenly came a body of horsemen. Before they realized it, +the lads were dashing by these at a distance of less than a hundred +yards. Here the Austrian uniforms stood them in good stead. The officer +hesitated to give a command to his men to fire on what were apparently +Austrian officers, and before he was made aware of the situation by +shouts from behind, the lads had placed considerable distance between +themselves and these new enemies. + +Now the latter also turned and gave chase. + +After some minutes the lads realized that they were easily maintaining +their lead and breathed easier. + +"We'll get away yet if our horses don't give out!" shouted Chester. + +"All right!" Hal shouted back. "Keep up the pace!" + +In their haste in seizing upon two horses, the lads had not had time to +look the animals over and it soon developed that they had made a bad +choice. The animals which the boys bestrode had returned only an hour +before from a long and tedious journey, and consequently were almost +exhausted. Under the spur they put forth their best efforts, but finally +they began to tire, and despite the urging of the lads, faltered in +their stride. + +Hal was the first to notice this. + +"I am afraid it is all up!" he shouted to Chester. + +Right in the face of his oncoming enemies he drew rein. Chester followed +his example, and then both lads quickly dismounted. + +At this spot there was a small clump of trees. Slapping their horses +across the flanks with their hats, the lads plunged in among the foliage +while the tired horses made off slowly. + +"Up into these trees quick," shouted Chester. "It has saved us before; +it may again!" + +Quickly the lads clambered up among the branches, where they lay +perfectly still. The sound of the approaching Austrians grew nearer, and +at last half a dozen of the enemy pulled up their mounts almost under +the lads' hiding place. + +"Which way did they go?" asked a voice. + +"They have probably made off through the woods," said a second. "We'll +have to search for them." + +The tree in which the lads were hiding was the largest nearby. Up in its +dense foliage the boys were absolutely hidden from the ground below. One +of the Austrians glanced up into the tree. + +"They may be hiding up here," he said to his companions. + +"Hardly likely," replied a second. + +"Well, I'll send up a couple of shots and see," said the first speaker. + +His rifle spoke sharply twice. Hal felt a slight stinging sensation in +his left arm. One of the bullets, as it passed, brushed his skin. The +other sang close to Chester's head. But in spite of this, and in spite +of the fact that another shot from below might end one of their lives, +neither boy so much as shifted his position. + +After firing the shot into the tree the Austrian became still, +listening, as did his companions. There was no sound. + +"They can't be up there," said a voice. "If they were, and even had not +been hit, they couldn't remain still." + +"You are right," said another voice. "We shall have to look for them +elsewhere. Scatter out, men, and we'll search the woods." + +The Austrians moved from beneath the tree. Waiting until he was sure +that they had gone, Chester whispered to Hal: + +"What shall we do now?" + +"If possible," replied Hal, "we shall slip down and try to pick out a +couple of fresh horses. Then we can make another dash for it." + +"All right," agreed Chester, "but we had better wait here until we can +get down the tree unseen." + +Hal nodded in assent, and for perhaps half an hour the lads waited +silently. In the distance they could hear the enemy beating up the +bushes for some trace of them, but these sounds gradually grew farther +away; then died down altogether. + +Cautiously Hal peered down from his hiding place. There was no sign of +an enemy. The lad dropped quickly to the ground, and Chester followed +suit a moment later. Then they dashed silently toward the road. + +Upon entering the woods in pursuit of the fugitives, the Austrians had +abandoned their horses and were searching afoot. Approaching the edge of +the forest, the lads saw six horses tied to trees. They ran rapidly +toward them. As they did so a single Austrian, who had been left to +guard the animals, stepped suddenly forward, raised his rifle and cried: +"Halt!" + +There was no time for either lad to draw his revolver. Chester's hand +went to his pocket, even as he ran, but he did not wait to extract the +weapon. With his hand still in his pocket, he pointed the muzzle of his +revolver at the Austrian and pressed the trigger. The bullet sped true +through the cloth, and the Austrian dropped his rifle and toppled over +to the ground. + +"Good work, Chester!" shouted Hal, not pausing in his stride toward the +horses. + +He had all six horses untied in a jiffy, and passing the bridle of one +to his chum, leaped lightly into the saddle. Chester did likewise. The +other horses stood still. + +"No use leaving them here for the enemy to pursue us with," decided +Chester. + +He rode his own horse among the others, and with several quick blows of +his cap, started them on ahead of them. + +At that moment, the Austrians who had been scouring the woods for the +fugitives, attracted by the sound of the shot, came into sight and +dashed toward the lads, their revolvers spitting fire as they ran. + +"Come on!" cried Hal to Chester. + +It was no time to hesitate, nor to fight back while there was a chance +of getting away. Putting spurs to their horses both lads were soon out +of range. + +"Now," said Chester, "we shall have to keep a sharp lookout for other +Austrians in front; for it is certain all of our pursuers didn't enter +the woods after us." + +"Right you are," replied Hal. + +They rode forward at a quick trot, and soon were out of sight of the +enemy behind. For perhaps fifteen minutes they continued on their way +without interruption, and then a band of horsemen bore down on them. + +"Austrians," said Chester briefly. "What shall we do?" + +"Go straight ahead," replied Hal quickly. "Perhaps they will not +recognize us. We still have our Austrian uniforms. It may be they will +take us for some of the searching party." + +They drew nearer the approaching horsemen. The latter reined in their +mounts. + +"Did you find them?" Hal called out. + +"No," came back the reply; "did you?" + +"No," said Hal, "they must have given us the slip." + +The horsemen came closer and Hal and Chester kept their faces averted as +much as possible, for they knew that a close scrutiny would betray their +identity. + +"Well," shouted Hal, "we will look a little farther on. You search the +woods. Perhaps your eyes may be better than ours." + +"All right," was the reply, and the boys rode on slowly so as to give +their mounts a rest. Some moments later there was a great commotion +behind, and turning in their saddles, the lads saw the Austrians coming +rapidly after them. They had come upon the little party who had seen the +lads leaving the woods. + +With a cry to Chester, Hal put spurs to his horse and soon both were +literally flying over the ground, the Austrians in full chase. + +But the horses that the boys now bestrode were much fresher than had +been their first mounts; still, Hal saw that several of the Austrians +were gaining. + +Now one of the enemy drew well ahead of his companions, a bit behind +came a second, while a third, who was some distance ahead of the +remainder, closely followed the second. These three, at their respective +distances, slowly drew closer to the lads. + +Suddenly, without a word to Hal, Chester checked his horse abruptly, and +his revolver flashed in his hand. Before the first Austrian could check +his mount, he had come within range of the lad's weapon, which spoke +sharply. The Austrian tumbled sidewise from his horse. + +Chester turned and spurred on after Hal. + +Now the second Austrian drew close upon the lad. Once more the latter +abruptly checked his horse and turned to face the Austrian. The latter, +perceiving the boy's maneuver, also drew rein. But he was not quick +enough, and a second bullet from Chester's revolver laid him low. Once +more the lad turned his horse's head forward and dashed on. + +The third Austrian, unmindful of the fate that had overtaken his two +companions, still dashed after the lads. He gained steadily, and was now +a considerable distance ahead of the main body of the enemy. A third +time Chester turned suddenly on the foe and a third time his revolver +spoke. He missed, and the Austrian opened with his own revolver. But his +aim was no better. + +Chester, sitting quietly on his horse, then took careful and deliberate +aim and at his next shot, the Austrian fell to the ground. Then he +turned and rode on after Hal, who had slowed down to wait for him. + +Once more the lads put spurs to their horses and dashed on--each forward +stride of their animals taking them much nearer the Russian lines and +safety--until at last they made out in the distance the outposts of the +Russian camp. + +Hal raised a cry of triumph, but at the same moment his horse stepped +into a hole and went to his knees, hurling Hal over his head. + +Chester reined in alongside his friend and leaped to the ground. The +Austrians, perceiving the lad's misfortune, bore down on them with a +wild cry of joy. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + +SAFE. + + +In spite of his tumble, Hal was uninjured and sprang quickly to his +feet. Chester turned to the prostrate horse, and attempted to get it to +its feet. The horse moaned with pain, and Chester gave up the attempt, +for he realized in an instant that the animal had broken its leg in the +fall. + +With revolvers in hands, both lads turned to face their foes. + +"We won't give up without a fight!" declared Hal grimly. + +"No, we won't give up without a fight!" Chester agreed. + +Standing behind the horse that was still on its feet the two lads +pointed their weapons at the foe, who bore down upon them at top speed. +There were at least a score of them, and the boys realized that the +encounter could have but one end. Still they were determined to fight it +out. + +But now, from the rear, came a fierce yell. Turning their eyes +momentarily in that direction, the lads beheld a welcome sight. Mounted +on their superb chargers and galloping forward as swiftly as the wind, +came a full squadron of Russian Cossacks; and as they came on, with +loose-hanging reins, waving their weapons in the air, the fierce Cossack +yell split the air time after time. + +The Austrians hesitated; then, not mindful to retreat and allow their +victims, whom they had followed so far, to escape scot-free they +advanced on the lads again. Chester calmly picked off the first man on +the right, and Hal disposed of the first man on the left. Realizing that +assistance was on the way, the boys fought coolly and with +determination, keeping the rearing and plunging horse always between +them and their foes. + +But this protection was soon removed. An Austrian bullet struck the +horse in the head and he fell to the ground. Quickly the lads dropped +behind the prostrate body and continued to pop away at their enemies. +Two more went down, and still the lads were uninjured. The Cossacks were +still some distance away, although approaching with the swiftness of the +wind. The Austrians, seeking to end the encounter, spread out, fan-wise, +and drew in upon the lads from three sides. The lads shifted their +positions so as still to face all their foes. Then the Austrians came +forward on a charge. + +But they had delayed too long, for now the onrushing Cossacks had come +within range, and a powerful voice rang out: + +"Faster!" + +In response to this command, the gallant chargers of the Cossacks leaped +forward. A volley rang out, and bullets whistling over the heads of Hal +and Chester found lodgment in Austrian breasts and heads. The enemy +turned and fled. + +With a quick word of command to his men the Cossack captain, now close +to the kneeling lads, pulled in his horse with a sudden movement and +sprang to the ground. The rest of the troop continued its mad dash after +the Austrians, who were fleeing as fast as their tired horses could +carry them. + +There was but one possible result of such a chase. Noble animals, though +the Austrian horses were, they were no match, at their best, for the +Cossack chargers. And there was no mercy in the hearts of the Cossacks +for their enemies. The Austrians did not cry for quarter, and no quarter +was given. Ten minutes later the Cossacks, their ranks thinned by four, +returned to where their leader had dismounted beside the lads. + +As the Cossack commander flung himself to the ground by their side, both +lads gave a cry of glad surprise. + +"Alexis!" they exclaimed in a single voice. + +"The same!" replied their Cossack friend. "Don't tell me any more about +your strategy. Where would you have been, if I hadn't arrived just now, +eh?" + +"Well," said Chester slowly, "we wouldn't be here." + +"You would have been dead, that's where you would have been," said +Alexis calmly. "As it was, I almost arrived too late. Perhaps next time +you will not leave me behind." + +"We won't try to thank you," said Hal. "But how did you happen to arrive +so opportunely?" + +"Why," replied Alexis, "looking across the plain I saw two horsemen +pursued by many others. I knew you would return from that direction, and +I surmised who it was. But here is one case where my keen eyesight +almost worked to your disadvantage. I made out your Austrian uniforms, +even as I would have ordered my men forward, and hesitated. It wasn't +any of my business if two Austrians were killed. Then I remembered your +talk of strategy, and guessed that maybe the uniforms were part of it. +But, you may take my word for it, you almost used too much strategy." + +Alexis now ordered one of his men to secure two of the riderless horses, +and, mounting, the lads rode back toward the Russian lines with the +Cossack troop. Here they wasted no time, but started at once on their +return journey to Lodz, Alexis, having obtained permission from his +superior officer, going with them. + +Grand Duke Nicholas was well pleased with the lads' report and +complimented them highly upon their bravery and resourcefulness. Then he +added, somewhat sorrowfully, the lads thought: + +"I shall indeed be sorry to lose you." + +"To lose us!" exclaimed Chester, in surprise. "Why, Your Excellency, we +have no intention of being killed." + +"I didn't mean that," replied the Grand Duke, with a slight smile, "but +I have other work of importance for you. In fact, I may say of greater +importance than any which you have yet accomplished." + +"And we shall be glad to undertake it, no matter what it is," said Hal. +"I am sure we can carry it through successfully." + +"So am I," replied the Grand Duke dryly. "After some of the things you +have done, I would not say there is anything you cannot do." + +"But this new mission?" questioned Hal. + +"The new mission," replied the Grand Duke, "will carry you back into +France." + +"What!" exclaimed both lads in surprise. + +"Exactly," said the Grand Duke. "That is why I said I would be sorry to +lose you, for I know that, once back with the British troops, you will +not return again to Russia." + +"Well, Your Excellency," said Chester, "we have seen service with the +Cossacks, and we like it immensely, but----" + +"But," interrupted the Grand Duke, "you would much prefer to be fighting +with the English, your own people, or a kindred people, at least. Is +that it?" + +Both lads bowed in assent. + +"It is, Your Excellency," replied Hal. + +"Well," said the Grand Duke, "so be it." + +He drew from his pocket a document, which he placed in Hal's hands. + +"This," he said, "you will place in the hands of either Sir John French, +the British commander, or General Joffre, the French commander-in-chief. +I could, of course, send the message by wireless to London, but it would +be intercepted by the Germans, and, while it naturally would be sent in +code, I am not at all sure that the Germans could not decipher it." + +"When shall we start, Your Excellency?" asked Chester. + +"Whenever it is convenient," was the reply. "And the manner of your +going I leave entirely to you. I will not hamper you with instructions." + +"Your Excellency," said Hal, struck with a sudden thought. + +"Yes?" + +"I should like to make a request." + +"Consider it granted," said the Grand Duke. + +"Well, then," said Hal, "I should like to ask permission to take Alexis +with us." + +The Grand Duke was plainly surprised. + +"He may be of great aid to us in getting through," Hal explained. "His +strength is prodigious, and more than once, as I have told you, has +stood us in good stead." + +"Well," said the Grand Duke thoughtfully, "I will not order him to +accompany you, for he would be out of his element on the other side; +but, if he is willing to go, he has my permission." + +After some further talk the boys took a friendly farewell of the +commander-in-chief of the Russian armies and left the tent. They hunted +up Alexis immediately. + +"Well, Alexis," said Hal, "to-morrow we start back for France!" + +The giant Cossack was on his feet in a moment. + +"You mean you are going away for good?" he asked. + +"Yes," replied Chester. + +Alexis, although not an emotional man, was stirred deeply. The boys +realized it in an instant; but he was not the man to give way to his +feelings, and he said simply: + +"I am sorry. I wish that you would remain here." + +Then Hal broached his plan. + +"Alexis," he said, "how would you like to come with us?" + +The giant looked at him in surprise. + +"Go with you?" he exclaimed. "To France?" + +"Yes." + +"But what would I do in France?" he questioned. + +"Fight!" replied Chester briefly. + +"True!" muttered Alexis. + +"The Grand Duke has given his permission, if you desire to go," said +Hal, "and we would indeed be glad to have you. We have grown very fond +of you." + +"And I of you," replied Alexis. + +"In France," said Chester, "there are no such men as you. You would be a +veritable Hercules, a man among men. Brave men there are there in +plenty, but none such as you." + +His vanity thus appealed to, Alexis saw the matter in a different light. +He slapped one great fist down upon the table in a mighty blow. + +"I'll go!" he shouted. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + +ON NEUTRAL SOIL. + + +"Surely you are not afraid, Alexis?" exclaimed Chester. + +"Afraid!" shouted Alexis. "Of course I am not afraid. But"--he eyed the +large aëroplane dubiously--"but a man was not made to fly about in the +air like a bird, particularly a man of my weight. Besides, I do not like +great height. If I stand upon a precipice, I am immediately struck with +the notion that I must jump off. If I jumped from an aëroplane I might +upset it." + +Both Hal and Chester laughed. + +"I was that way myself once," said Chester, "so I know just how you +feel. Many a man, otherwise very brave, has that same horror of height. +However, you will soon get used to it." + +"Maybe so," said Alexis dubiously. "However, if one man can fly, why, so +can I. I am willing to take a chance." + +"Good!" exclaimed Hal. "Now to get started." + +Leaving Lodz, the three had made their way north, keeping as close to +the German border as was safe, until they had reached Riga, on the Gulf +of Riga, which extends in from the Baltic Sea. Here they had at first +thought of going part of the distance by boat, but, because of the +likelihood of the approach of German warships in the Baltic, had given +up this plan and decided upon an aëroplane. + +"We came to Russia in an airship," Hal had said. "We might as well go +back in one. Besides, it is quicker." + +And so it was agreed. + +Ten miles south of Riga, surrounded by Russian airmen, they climbed into +the craft which the Russian commander in the little city had provided +for them. The plane was large and roomy, having a seating capacity of +five. + +Hal took his place at the steering wheel and Chester climbed aboard. + +Still eyeing the flying craft suspiciously, Alexis followed Chester, +and, sitting down suddenly, took hold of the seat with both hands and +hung on for dear life, although the craft was still upon the ground. +Then he lowered his head and shut his eyes. + +Hal gave the word, and willing hands started the machine along the +ground. Gradually it gained momentum until it was skimming over the +ground at a rapid gait. Then Hal threw over the elevating lever, and the +machine shot into the air amid the cheers of the Russians below. + +Alexis was conscious of a sinking sensation in the region of his +stomach, and he ducked his head even lower as the car rose higher in the +air. + +"Look up, Alexis!" shouted Chester, reaching over and laying a hand on +the Cossack's arm. + +Now that the machine had reached a good height, Hal held it steady, and +it darted ahead on a straightaway course. The plane shook with the +vibrations of the engine, but otherwise there was scarcely a noticeable +motion. + +Now that the machine was more steady, Alexis, in response to Chester's +command, slowly opened his eyes and looked about. Seeing nothing, he +closed them again immediately, and again ducked his head. Once more +Chester yelled at him to look about, and at last Alexis raised his head +and glanced into the distance. + +"This is a terrible place for a man to be," he muttered with a shudder. +"If man were meant to fly he would have been given wings. It is tempting +the wrath of the elements to be here." + +As he looked about him, however, and became conscious of the steadiness +of the craft, his composure returned, and soon he was making inquiries +regarding the construction of the craft, its speed and the height to +which it could ascend. He glanced over the side of the machine, and then +looked quickly upward again. The one glance below had made him ill. + +He smiled faintly. "I can't look down yet," he said ruefully. "I suppose +I'll get used to it in time; but now I had better keep my eyes inside." + +"How fast are we going, Hal?" asked Chester. + +"Sixty-five miles an hour," was Hal's reply. + +Alexis was astonished. + +"Sixty-five miles!" he ejaculated. "Why, it seems as if we were standing +still." + +"If we were close enough to the earth you would soon notice the +difference," said Chester. + +For another hour they continued on their way without incident, and then +Chester discovered the dim outline of a second aircraft trailing them at +a distance. It was not gaining, but even when Hal put on more speed, at +a word from Chester, he was unable to shake it off. + +"Evidently a German," said Chester. "I suppose he wants to see where we +are going." + +For another hour the plane pursued them. Then Chester perceived that +there were two instead of one, and that both were creeping up on them. + +With a cry to Hal, Chester picked two rifles from the bottom of the car. + +"We'll have to fight them off!" he cried. + +Alexis stirred uneasily in his seat. + +"I was afraid of it," he muttered. "Now, what will happen to me when I +go hurtling through space to the ground below?" + +He shuddered. + +Hal, in response to a command from Chester, slowed down suddenly. Taking +careful aim at one of the pursuers, Chester emptied the magazine of his +first rifle. There came from behind the sounds of screams, followed by +an explosion. + +"What was that?" cried Alexis in alarm. + +"I got one of them!" replied Chester calmly. "The plane has gone to +earth." + +The second pursuing plane reduced its speed, but still clung on the +trail of its would-be prey. + +"We'll have to dispose of it some way, Hal," shouted Chester. "Turn +quickly and run toward it, and I'll see if I can't send it to the +ground." + +He held his rifle ready as he spoke. Reducing the speed of the craft a +trifle, Hal brought its head about in a wide circle; then darted +suddenly toward the enemy. + +But the latter was not caught unprepared, and a rifle bullet whistled +close to Alexis' ear. + +The giant Cossack clapped a hand to his head and for the first time +looked toward the enemy. Then, reaching to the bottom of the machine, he +raised up with a weapon, and, aiming at the hull of the enemy in the +distance, poured the entire contents of the magazine into it. At the +same moment a well-directed shot from Chester's rifle struck the pilot. +He sprang to his feet, spun around crazily, and plunged from the car. A +moment later and the aëroplane blew up with a loud bang. + +Alexis, who had seen the pilot go overboard, let out a cry of dismay. He +could not help but think of the terrible fall to the ground. + +"Good work, Alexis!" cried Chester. "I told you you would get used to it +before long." + +"I am not used to it," replied the giant, "but when a bullet whistles +past my ear I get mad. I just naturally have to fight back." + +Nevertheless he made a brave effort to appear unconcerned, and he took a +look over the side. At that moment Hal allowed the car to glide slowly +nearer the earth. For a moment Alexis was unaware of this sinking +sensation; but suddenly treetops came into view, and the Cossack let out +a cry of alarm: + +"We're sinking!" he exclaimed. + +Hal laughed. + +"Just coming down to get a look about," he replied. "Now, if you will +look over at the earth a few moments, you will soon overcome your +uneasiness." + +Alexis, taking a long breath, did so; and he continued to peer over the +side, even after Hal, touching the elevating lever, sent the plane high +in the air again. + +Darkness fell and still the 'plane sped on. Then, so suddenly that they +seemed to spring up from nowhere, the swiftly moving aëroplane was +surrounded on all sides--as it seemed to the voyagers--by a score of +hostile aircraft, while shots rang out from several sides. + +Hal acted promptly, as had always been his wont. He allowed the 'plane +to drop a good quarter of a mile with a sudden lurch, and then righting +it, darted forward again. For a moment they had shaken off the foe, but +the latter was not long in finding them. Searchlights flashed in the +sky, seeking out the prey. + +By a series of clever maneuvers, Hal succeeded in evading the hostile +craft during the long hours of the night, turning first this way and +then that, rising and falling. But with the first gray of dawn, it +became plain to both boys that escape was practically impossible. +Looking down Hal saw water below him, and at the same moment the hostile +air fleet ten 'planes strong, swooped down on them. + +Chester's rifle cracked, as did that of Alexis. Bullets flew about all +three occupants of the machine, and then the craft, struck in a vital +spot, staggered. The 'plane began to sink slowly. In vain did Hal try to +check the descent. The machine, still heading slightly toward the north, +glided toward the water below. + +Suddenly Hal made out something below besides water. It was land. The +lad breathed easier, for it was plain, that at the rate at which the +craft was sinking, it could clear the water by a good quarter of a mile, +beyond which the lad could see a sandy coast. + +"It must be the coast of Sweden or Denmark," he said to himself, "in +which event we are safe, for it is neutral ground." + +The Germans, realizing that their foe was sinking, did not waste another +shot on it, but swarmed after. Now the craft was close to the water. +Gently it skimmed over it, across a short stretch of sand, and then +settled slowly to the ground. + +Hal and Chester glanced about. There was no one in sight on the sandy +beach and the Germans were coming right after them. + +"Even though this be Sweden," said Hal, "unless Swedish troops come to +our aid, the Germans are likely to violate the neutrality of the country +and take us anyhow." + +"Not without a fight," declared Alexis. "Let me get my feet on the +ground again, and I will show you such a fight as you never saw. On the +ground I can fight." + +Now the 'plane was but a few scant yards from the earth. It grounded +with a shock. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX. + +THE DEATH OF A TITAN. + + +Quickly the three leaped out. In spite of the Germans hovering overhead, +Hal examined the 'plane. + +"Great Scott!" he exclaimed, after a quick, though careful, inspection. +"I can fix this thing in five minutes." + +Now the German machines came to the ground a short distance away. From +each craft leaped three men, who dashed toward the three friends. + +Alexis turned to Hal and Chester. + +"Do you," he said calmly, "fix up the airship. I will meet these +fellows!" + +Before either lad could reply, he had hurled himself upon the foe. + +For some reason, probably because they did not wish to attract the +attention of the Swedish authorities by the sounds of a struggle, the +Germans, at first, drew no firearms. Perceiving but one form rushing +toward them, they advanced to meet him confidently. Plainly they +considered it the wild dash of a madman. + +Hal and Chester turned their attention to the aëroplane, and while +Alexis fought against overwhelming numbers, they overhauled it +carefully. + +Right into the midst of his foes rushed the giant. Such a superb attack +was never seen before--such a mad wild dash as he took the enemy by +surprise and hurled them back--all of them--back against the airships +that stood on the sands. + +As the huge Cossack rushed forward, his sword flashed above his head. +His revolver he gripped tightly by the barrel. A fighting fire darted +from his eye, and his thin lips were bared in a slight smile. + +If ever a man felt the joy of battle it was he. He heeded not the number +of his adversaries nor the steel that flashed forth against him. +Slashing, cutting, parrying, thrusting, he hurled himself in upon them. +They were carried back by the very fierceness of his attack. They gave +way before him, parting to retreat around one of the aircraft. With one +swift sweep of his foot, Alexis tore a ragged hole in the bottom of the +first craft; and at the same instant two men fell beneath his slashing +blows. + +They could not stand before him--their very numbers were against them as +the giant pressed ever forward. Now a man dropped to the ground and +seized the giant by the left leg, thinking to drag him down. Alexis +drove his right boot into the man's face, and at the same moment, by a +quick back-handed sweep of his sword, cut down a man who would have +sprung upon his back. + +His revolver rose and fell, once, twice, three times, and beneath these +crushing blows more Germans went down. But Alexis did not escape +unscathed. A sword thrust had pierced his chest, not deeply, but the +blood streamed forth. There was a gaping wound in his cheek; his +clothing was pierced in a dozen places. + +But in spite of this he pressed on. He thought only of advance, never of +retreat; and as he hurled his gigantic body, time after time, upon the +overwhelming number of his foes, they gave back in consternation and +astonishment. + +Ten men lay dead upon the ground, their skulls battered by fierce blows +of the revolver, or pierced through and through by the great sword. + +And now Hal and Chester, the aëroplane once more ready for flight, +dashed forward to the rescue with loud cries. + +They ranged themselves alongside the fighting Cossack. He greeted them +with a half-smile; he had no time for more. Three men threw themselves +upon him. One he hurled from him with a stroke of his mighty leg, +another felt the weight of his revolver butt and the third fell back +with a sword wound in his chest. + +Unmindful of his own danger, the giant turned to the aid of Chester, +who, at that moment was at the mercy of an enemy's sword. A mighty +stroke of the massive arm and the German lay dead on the ground. + +The Germans, having had the worst of this encounter with a single foe, +stood back and drew their revolvers. Quickly Alexis reversed his own +weapon and fired. There was one enemy less. A bullet struck him in the +chest. He staggered, but recovered, and again fired at his foes. + +The revolvers of the two lads were also spitting fire. A bullet grazed +Hal's head and he toppled over. He was up in a moment, however, fighting +more fiercely than before. Chester felt a stinging sensation in his +right arm. Quickly he transferred his weapon to his left hand, and it +continued to send out its deadly missiles. + +But this unequal contest could not last. It must be ended. + +Alexis, wounded in a score of places, his giant body hacked and hewn, +hurled himself forward in one last desperate attack. Germans quailed +before the very fury of his face; they tumbled here and there beneath +his sword, or sweeping blows of his now empty revolver. A bullet struck +the giant in the throat. He dropped his revolver and clapped his hand to +the wound. Another struck him in the shoulder. He sprang forward, struck +down another of the enemy, then staggered back. + +And at that moment there came the sound of tramping footsteps on the +sand. Turning quickly Hal and Chester perceived approaching rapidly a +body of Swedish troops. The Germans saw them at the same instant. They +were still a mile away across the sands, but the Germans had no mind to +be caught and interned. Quickly they leaped for their aircraft, all +except those who remained upon the sands, their faces turned upward or +buried therein. + +Hal and Chester each seized Alexis by an arm and dragged him back toward +their own aëroplane, now righted and waiting only the touch that would +send it into the air. The giant Cossack staggered along, but it was +plain to both lads that he was about to collapse. + +"Come, come, Alexis!" cried Hal, trying to urge him on. "Only a few more +steps and we will be all right." + +To the very side of the craft they carried him; but here, shaking +himself free of their detaining hands, he suddenly fell, face forward, +upon the ground. Quickly the two lads bent over him, and succeeded in +turning him on his back. + +His voice came in faint gasps. The boys bent near to catch what he was +saying. + +"Leave me here! You go on!" came his voice. "I am done for! Save +yourselves!" + +The lads waited to hear no more. Chester took him by the feet and Hal by +the head, and with great effort succeeded in placing him within the +aëroplane, stretching him out, as well as they could across two of the +seats. Then Chester sprang in and Hal jumped to the wheel. + +Along the beach the craft skimmed lightly, then arose from the ground. +At the same instant a volley rang out from the approaching Swedish +troops and the officer in command called out to surrender. The German +airships, for some unaccountable reason, had not waited to resume the +fight upon ascending into the air, but had made off. + +Hal headed the aëroplane due westward, making for the coast of England. +Alexis had lapsed into unconsciousness upon being placed in the machine, +but now he stirred feebly and spoke. + +"A real fight, wasn't it?" he gasped. "I told you I could do it if I +were on the ground. How many was it I killed? Twenty--thirty--forty----" + +He broke off and burst into a fit of coughing. Chester bent over him +anxiously. + +"You'll be all right in a day or two, old man," he said gently. + +Alexis smiled feebly. + +"Don't try to fool me," he said. "I am a man. I know when death is near +and I am not afraid to face it." + +Both lads realized that their giant Cossack friend was near his end, but +there was nothing they could do for him. Chester bound up the wounds as +well as he could, stopping the flow of blood, but that was all. + +As the aëroplane flew over the sea toward the coast of England, the +dying man continued to talk. Now he sat up in the craft and gazed down +over the side. + +"I had always thought," he said slowly, "that I should end my days in my +own land. As it is I shall not end them in any land at all; but in the +air. It is strange." + +Hal slowed the aëroplane down until it was barely moving and turned to +Alexis. + +"You are wrong," he said. "You are not going to die. In a few hours we +shall be in England, where you shall have the best of medical +attention." + +"It is too late," replied the Cossack calmly. "I shall not live an +hour." + +His breath came with difficulty. + +"There is one thing I should like to know," he said. + +"What is it, Alexis?" asked Hal. + +"Will you tell me what you meant by 'drawing the long bow'?" + +Hal was silent for some moments, and then replied gravely. + +"When a man boasts of things he has never done, in America it is called +'drawing the long bow.' I was mistaken in your case. It would be +impossible for you to 'draw the long bow.' You have done too much." + +"That is true," agreed Chester. + +Suddenly the giant frame fell back. Hal turned as best he could while +Chester leaned over him anxiously. Alexis extended a hand to each of +them, which they grasped. + +"This," he said, pressing their hands in a still strong grip, "is the +end. I wish that I could have lived to see the outcome of this war." + +"There can be but one outcome," replied Chester softly. "You may rest +assured of that." + +"True," said the giant, "but I would like to have seen my old home +again." + +The lads were silent. Finally Hal spoke. + +"To think," he said, "that we are responsible for your fate; but for us +you would have remained with the army and have lived to the end of the +war. We are to blame." + +"Sh-h-h," whispered the dying giant. The hand which held Chester's freed +itself and groped in his pocket. "But for you lads," he continued, "I +should never have won this." + +He pulled from his pocket the Cross of St. George, pinned to his breast +by the Russian emperor, and gazed at it lovingly. + +"It is well worth the sacrifice," he said. + +Still holding the medal his hand again sought Chester's and pressed it. +His other hand still gripped Hal's. + +"Good-by, boys," he said firmly. "Let the Grand Duke know." + +The pressure upon their hands relaxed. The giant frame of Alexis +Vergoff, brave man and fighter extraordinary, stiffened and lay still. +He was dead. + +And as the aëroplane swept over the sea to the distant coast of England +Hal and Chester mourned the loss of a true and stanch friend. + +Arrived in England the lads saw the body of Alexis laid to rest with +fitting honors, and continued their mission to the continent, where Hal +put the document entrusted to his care by the Russian Grand Duke +Nicholas into the hands of Field Marshal Sir John French, +commander-in-chief of the British forces on the continent. + +And so we shall take leave of them for a short time. Their subsequent +adventures will be found in a succeeding volume, entitled: "The Boy +Allies in the Trenches; or Midst Shot and Shell Along the Aisne." + +THE END. + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Boy Allies with the Cossacks, by Clair W. 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Hayes + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Boy Allies with the Cossacks + Or, A Wild Dash over the Carpathians + +Author: Clair W. Hayes + +Release Date: January 13, 2010 [EBook #30951] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY ALLIES WITH THE COSSACKS *** + + + + +Produced by Roger Frank, D Alexander and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<div style='margin:40px auto; text-align:center;'> + <img alt='emblem' src='images/icover.jpg' /> +</div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='titlepage'> +<p class='mt20 fs22'>THE BOY ALLIES<br />WITH THE COSSACKS</p> +<p class='mt20 mb20'>OR</p> +<p class='mb40 fs14'>A Wild Dash Over The Carpathian Mountains</p> +<p class='fs16 mb20'>By CLAIR W. HAYES</p> +<p class='mb10 fss'>AUTHOR OF</p> +<p class='mb60 fss'>“The Boy Allies at Liège”<br /> +“The Boy Allies On the Firing Line”<br /> +“The Boy Allies In the Trenches”</p> +<div style='margin:40px auto; text-align:center;'> + <img alt='emblem' src='images/ititle.jpg' /> +</div> + +</div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='titlepage'> +<p class='fss'>Copyright, 1915</p> +<p class='fss'>B<span class='fss'>Y</span> A. L. B<span class='fss'>URT</span> C<span class='fss'>OMPANY</span></p> +<hr class='b10' /> +<p class='fss'>THE BOY ALLIES WITH THE COSSACKS</p> +</div> + +<hr class='pb' /> + +<div class='figcenter'> +<img src='images/i003.jpg' id="img001" alt='' /> +<p class='center caption'> +ALEXIS–FROM HIS CANTEEN POURED WATER OVER THE LAD’S FACE.<br /><i>Page 203.</i> <i>The Boy Allies With the Cossacks</i>. +</p></div><!-- figure --> + +<hr class='pb' /><h1>THE BOY ALLIES WITH THE COSSACKS.</h1> <hr class='pb' /> <h2><a +id='link_1'></a>CHAPTER I.<br /><span class='fss'>FLYING.</span></h2> + +<p>“What’s that below, Hal?”</p> + +<p>The speaker was Chester Crawford, an American lad of some 16 +years.</p> + +<p>Hal Paine allowed his eyes to turn from the steering wheel and +glanced over the side of the flying aëroplane.</p> + +<p>“I don’t see anything,” he replied, after a +careful scrutiny below.</p> + +<p>“Neither do I, now,” said Chester, straining his +eyes.</p> + +<p>At this moment the third occupant of the machine made his presence +known.</p> + +<p>“Woof! Woof!” he exclaimed.</p> + +<p>The third speaker was Marquis, a dog.</p> + +<p>“Woof! Woof!” he barked again.</p> + +<p>Hal, with a quick move, slackened the speed of the aëroplane, and +let it glide gently closer to the earth.</p> + +<p>“Must be something wrong,” he confided to Chester, +“or Marquis wouldn’t be barking like that.”</p> + +<p>Both lads peered into the darkness that engulfed them on all sides. +As far as the eye could penetrate there was nothing but blackness, +solid, intense.</p> + +<p>“Let’s go a little lower, Hal,” whispered +Chester.</p> + +<p>Under Hal’s firm hand the aëroplane came down gently, until at +last it was soaring close to the treetops. And now, suddenly, both lads +made out the cause of Marquis’s uneasiness.</p> + +<p>Beneath them were thousands upon thousands of armed men. To the +north, to the south, and to the east and west the dense mass of +humanity stretched out. Hal and Chester, flying close to the earth, at +last could make out moving forms below them.</p> + +<p>Suddenly it became light. Not broad daylight, but the darkness gave +way enough for the lads to distinguish what lay below them. The dawn of +another day was breaking.</p> + +<p>At the same instant that the lads made out the huge mass of humanity +upon the ground their presence in the air was discovered. There came +the sound of a single shot and the whiz of a bullet, as it sped close +to Hal’s ear.</p> + +<p>With a quick movement the lad sent the plane soaring high in the air +once more. So sudden was the movement that Chester, caught unprepared, +lost his balance, and saved himself from tumbling to the ground only by +clutching the side of the machine. Marquis also had a narrow escape +from being thrown out. He let out a loud yelp of fear, as he was thrown +violently against Chester. The lad threw out a hand and grabbed him by +the scruff of the neck, just as it seemed he would plunge to certain +destruction.</p> + +<p>“Say!” he called to Hal, when he finally regained his +breath and his head. “What’s the matter with you? You +almost dumped us both out.”</p> + +<p>“Did I?” replied Hal briefly. “Well, as long as +you didn’t fall it’s all right. We had to come up suddenly, +or the chances were we would have gone down suddenly. But it’s my +fault. I should have given you warning. Are you hurt?”</p> + +<p>“No,” replied Chester.</p> + +<p>“I’ll be careful next time,” said Hal. +“You’ll have to forgive me this once.”</p> + +<p>“Say no more about it,” answered Chester. “But +what was the cause of this sudden rise?”</p> + +<p>“Cause!” repeated Hal in astonishment. “You +don’t mean to tell me you don’t know the cause? +Didn’t you hear that shot?”</p> + +<p>“Yes, I heard it. But how do you know whether it was fired by +friend or foe?”</p> + +<p>“I can’t see as that would make any difference if it +happened to hit us. However, I’m morally certain they were +Germans.”</p> + +<p>“Well, maybe they were. What are we going to do +now?”</p> + +<p>“We’ll stay up here until we are absolutely certain we +have passed over the German lines. Then we’ll come +down.”</p> + +<p>The machine was high in the air now, and, peering intently over the +side, as he did, Chester was unable to make out anything below in the +early morning light.</p> + +<p>But in the rear, soaring high in the air, although neither lad +realized it, a new danger threatened. When the presence of the +boys’ plane had been discovered, a German craft had immediately +risen, and was now in pursuit.</p> + +<p>Glancing over his shoulder, Chester was the first to discover that +they were followed. At the same moment that he perceived the pursuing +machine there came a shot from the enemy.</p> + +<p>There was no need for Chester to cry out to Hal. The sound of the +shot told the latter of their danger, and he immediately threw the +speed lever over as far as it would go.</p> + +<p>The machine bounded forward.</p> + +<p>But the pursuer also came on faster than before; and, while it was +apparent that he was not lessening the distance between the two craft, +he nevertheless was still in range, and his rifle continued to crack. +However, neither the machine nor its three occupants were struck.</p> + +<p>Chester took a snap shot at the other craft with his revolver, but +the bullet fell short. While the enemy could pepper them at will with +his rifle, a bullet from the lad’s revolver could not reach +him.</p> + +<p>Hal heard the sound of Chester’s revolver, and called out:</p> + +<p>“Did you hit him?”</p> + +<p>“No!” Chester shouted back, “he’s too far +behind. But he’ll get us in a minute if we don’t do +something.” To himself he added: “If I only had a +rifle!”</p> + +<p>“You be ready with your revolver,” Hal called to his +friend, “and I’ll soon fix that. It’s our only +chance.”</p> + +<p>Abruptly he slackened the speed of the machine, and swiftly the +enemy came on. So suddenly had Hal acted that the man at the wheel of +the pursuing machine could not act promptly enough, and was within +range of Chester’s revolver before he could slow down.</p> + +<p>As the first machine righted after its abrupt halt, Chester took +deliberate aim and fired, even at the moment that a bullet passed close +to his head.</p> + +<p>There was a yell from the pursuing machine. A man leaped suddenly to +his feet, shaking the frail craft violently as he did so, waved his +arms once, twice, and toppled into space.</p> + +<p>“I got one of ’em,” Chester shouted to Hal, and +his lips shut grimly.</p> + +<p>“Good for you!” Hal shouted back.</p> + +<p>Even Marquis realized that it was time to be pleased, and he sent up +a sharp bark of joy. His canine intelligence told him that something +that threatened had been overcome.</p> + +<p>But the man at the wheel of the German aëroplane, now that he was +alone, was not minded to give up the chase. The machine darted at the +boys’ craft suddenly, and, but for the fact that Hal at that very +moment happened to glance over his shoulder, the sharp-pointed prow of +the German craft would have cut them down.</p> + +<p>With a sudden twist of the wheel, however, Hal sent the machine out +of the path of the German, and, as the enemy sped by, Chester took a +snap shot with his revolver.</p> + +<p>Evidently he missed, for the German checked his plane and returned +to the attack.</p> + +<p>“So,” said Hal to himself, “two can play at that +game.”</p> + +<p>Once more he avoided the German rush; and then, wheeling his own +craft at the moment the German sped by, he dashed in pursuit. The +enemy, doing the work of two men, did not perceive this change in +tactics by his foes, and, even as he slowed down to turn and make +another attack, the point of the lad’s machine plowed into +him.</p> + +<p>There was a ripping, tearing sound; the German plane wavered and +started to fall as the craft in which the boys were flying dashed by. +But, by a superhuman effort, the German succeeded in righting his +craft.</p> + +<p>Then, holding the wheel steady with one hand, he calmly produced a +revolver and took deliberate aim at Hal.</p> + +<p>There was a sharp crack, followed immediately by another, but Hal +was unharmed.</p> + +<p>Realizing the German’s purpose, Chester’s weapon had +spoken a second before that of the enemy. The lad had not had time to +take careful aim, but the bullet sped true, striking the German +squarely in the forehead, even at the moment his finger pressed the +trigger of his own revolver.</p> + +<p>Chester saw the man throw up his hands and fall backward. The German +plane, now without a hand to keep it steady, rocked crazily for several +moments, then turned turtle and went tumbling over and over toward the +ground.</p> + +<p>“Did you get him, Chester?” asked Hal, who had not +turned his head, and therefore had not perceived his own danger.</p> + +<p>“Yes, I got him,” replied Chester simply.</p> + +<p>“Good!” returned Hal. “And the machine?”</p> + +<p>“Gone!”</p> + +<p>The lads now paused to take stock of their own damage, if any. There +was none. Not a German bullet had so much as struck the machine.</p> + +<p>“They are not very good marksmen, are they?” said Hal, +with a slight grin.</p> + +<p>“Doesn’t look that way,” returned Chester. +“However, maybe those fellows are not the best +specimens.”</p> + +<p>“Maybe not,” replied Hal.</p> + +<p>“What next?” asked Chester, after a slight pause.</p> + +<p>“Guess we might as well go on,” replied Hal. +“There may be some more of those German machines flying after us, +so I guess it behooves us to get away from here as soon as +possible.”</p> + +<p>“I guess you are right,” Chester acquiesced.</p> + +<p>Once more the aëroplane straightened itself out on its course and, +flying high–absolutely hidden from the ground by a dense mass of +black clouds that seemed to spring up as if by magic–sped on.</p> + +<p>Hal, with firm hands on the wheel, kept his gaze directly ahead. +Chester settled himself comfortably in his seat again, and Marquis, +after sniffing about for several moments, finally composed himself to +sleep.</p> + +<p>In spite of the fact that he was flying far above ground, the dog +had not shown a sign of nervousness or fright. Evidently he had no +fear. Possibly through his head flashed the thought that if these young +boys who were caring for him had saved him once, it was no more than +they would do again.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_2'></a>CHAPTER II.<br /><span +class='fss'>BEYOND THE ENEMY.</span></h2> + +<p>Hal Paine and Chester Crawford, two young American lads, had already +seen much active service in the great European war of 1914, the +greatest war of all history.</p> + +<p>With Hal’s mother they had been in the capital of Germany when +the conflagration broke out. In making their way from Berlin they had +been separated from Mrs. Paine and, thrown upon their resources, it +became necessary for them to make their way out of Germany alone, or +else to stay in Berlin for an indefinite time. The boys elected to +leave.</p> + +<p>With Major Raoul Derevaux, a French Officer, then a captain, and +Captain Harry Anderson, an Englishman, they had finally succeeded in +making their way into the Belgian lines. They had witnessed the heroic +defense of the Belgians at Liège, and had themselves taken part in the +battle. Having accomplished several missions successfully, they had +come to be looked upon with the greatest respect by the Belgian +commander.</p> + +<p>At Louvain Hal was wounded, and Chester had him conveyed to +Brussels. Here the lads again fell in with Captain Anderson, and, +through the good offices of the latter, eventually found themselves +attached to the British forces on the continent. They had gained favor +in the eyes of Sir John French, the British Field Marshal in command of +the British troops, and had successfully accomplished several difficult +missions.</p> + +<p>Taken prisoners by the Germans, they had been saved from death at +the hands of a firing squad by the Emperor of Germany himself, and had +finally been taken back to Berlin.</p> + +<p>In the streets of the German capital, one day, a message had been +put into their hands by an English prisoner, who declared that its +delivery to the Grand Duke Nicholas, commander of the hosts of the Czar +of Russia, was a matter of much moment.</p> + +<p>Displaying great resourcefulness and bravery, the lads had succeeded +in escaping from Berlin in an aëroplane, as narrated in “The Boy +Allies on the Firing Line,” the same in which, at the opening of +this story, we find them flying swiftly eastward.</p> + +<p>Crack revolver shots, and having skill in the use of the sword and +with their fists, the boys had fought themselves out of many ticklish +situations. And now, free again, they were making all speed to deliver +the message from the combined leaders of two countries to Grand Duke +Nicholas, a message that would mean closer coöperation between the +Russians in the east and the British and French forces in the west.</p> + +<p>The Russian campaign so far could hardly be called a success. True, +the first German advance into Poland, with Warsaw as its object, had +been checked, and the invader had been driven back; but the mighty +legions of the Czar of all the Russias could not be mobilized with the +swiftness of the Kaiser’s troops; and, when mobilized, could not +be transported to the front with the same dispatch.</p> + +<p>Reënforced after their first defeat in Poland, the Germans had begun +a new drive into the heart of Poland. Day after day they drew nearer +and nearer to the little capital, Warsaw–the Russians retreating +before them.</p> + +<p>But now, within two days’ march of Warsaw, the Russians held +steadily, and, try as he might, the German commander could not break +through this line of steel. Grand Duke Nicholas, commander-in-chief of +the Russian armies–who at first had been with the southern army +opposing the Austrians and advancing upon Cracow, in Galicia–had +hurried north, to take personal command in Poland.</p> + +<p>His presence had instilled new vigor into the Russian troops, and, +after several days of defensive action, the Russian troops had at last +resumed the offensive.</p> + +<p>It was toward this mighty army that the aëroplane that had borne the +boys through the heart of the enemy was now flying swiftly.</p> + +<p>“Seems to me,” said Hal, “that by this time we +must have passed the German lines. I guess we might as well go down a +bit and have a look around.”</p> + +<p>Accordingly the machine glided nearer the earth. The day was dark +and foggy, and at first the lads could discern nothing below but a +great blur.</p> + +<p>They drew closer.</p> + +<p>At that moment there came a shot from below. Hal instinctively threw +over the lever in an effort to take the craft out of harm’s +way.</p> + +<p>But the machine did not respond to his touch.</p> + +<p>“Great Scott!” he cried. “That one bullet must +have put us out of commission. We’ll have to go down, or be shot +to pieces up here.”</p> + +<p>Gently the little craft glided toward the earth; and now the boys +could make out the objects below.</p> + +<p>On all sides, stretching out as far as the eye could see, was a +mighty mass of moving men.</p> + +<p>“Germans?” asked Chester anxiously.</p> + +<p>“We’ll soon see,” replied Hal briefly.</p> + +<p>It was apparent now that those below, realizing that the aircraft +was falling, would not fire at it again. With upturned eyes thousands +of men watched the flight of the little plane, as it soared down among +them.</p> + +<p>Hal looked closely at the men, as the machine drew near the ground, +and then exclaimed:</p> + +<p>“No, they are not Germans; Russians, that’s what they +are.”</p> + +<p>Chester raised a feeble cheer.</p> + +<p>“Hurrah!” he shouted.</p> + +<p>Marquis, aroused by the sound of the lad’s voices, arose and +stretched. Even he seemed pleased.</p> + +<p>And now the aëroplane bumped the ground, and the lads stepped out to +see a long line of rifle barrels confronting them.</p> + +<p>The lads threw up their hands instantly, but Marquis’s back +bristled and he growled threateningly.</p> + +<p>“Keep quiet!” Chester commanded, and the dog grew still. +An officer approached the lads.</p> + +<p>“What do you here?” he demanded, in some language the +lads could not understand.</p> + +<p>The lads shook their heads, and the officer tried again, this time +in German.</p> + +<p>“What do you here?” he demanded.</p> + +<p>As briefly as possible, Hal, acting as spokesman, explained. The +officer’s incredulous gaze grew more so as the lad went on with +his story. When the lad had finished, he said simply:</p> + +<p>“I don’t believe you!”</p> + +<p>Hal was angry in a second. He took a step toward the officer.</p> + +<p>“What do you mean by that?” he demanded.</p> + +<p>The officer stood his ground.</p> + +<p>“Just what I say,” he replied. “I don’t +believe you. The tale you tell is impossible.”</p> + +<p>Chester stepped into the breach. He took Hal by the arm.</p> + +<p>“Of course such a tale is hard to believe,” he said. +“But, nevertheless, it is true. We carry an important message for +the Grand Duke.”</p> + +<p>“Well,” said the officer, “I don’t think you +will see him. He is too busy to give up his time to listen to such a +tale as yours.”</p> + +<p>But at this moment a second officer, apparently the other’s +superior, approached. To him, upon request, Hal repeated his story. +This officer also looked incredulous, but the result was different.</p> + +<p>“You tell a very strange story,” he said, “but it +is not for me to pass upon its veracity. You shall be given an audience +with the Grand Duke; but, mark me well, if it is found that you have +been lying–that you have nothing of importance, it will go hard +with you.”</p> + +<p>“We have no fear of that, sir,” said Chester +briefly.</p> + +<p>“All right, then. Follow me.”</p> + +<p>The lads did as ordered, Marquis trailing along after them. Through +thousands of rapidly-moving men the lads followed the officer, and at +last, after more than an hour’s walk, came to a stop, upon +command, in front of a large, bewhiskered man, of imposing military +stature.</p> + +<p>“This,” said the officer who had conducted them, +“is Grand Duke Nicholas.”</p> + +<p>The officer looked down on them.</p> + +<p>“What is it?” he demanded gruffly.</p> + +<p>The officer repeated the story the boys had told him. The Grand Duke +grew greatly interested as the story progressed, and, when the message +was mentioned, he interrupted.</p> + +<p>“Enough,” he said. “I have been expecting such a +message.” He turned to the two lads. “Do you bear +it?” he asked.</p> + +<p>Hal bowed in assent.</p> + +<p>“Then give it to me!” he cried eagerly.</p> + +<p>Chester reached in his pocket, and a moment more the Grand Duke +eagerly clutched the paper the lad handed him–a paper they had +gone through so much to deliver.</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke read the message through twice, sitting on his horse +without a move, his face a perfect blank. Then he thrust it into his +pocket and turned once more to the two lads.</p> + +<p>“You have done well,” he said. “Captain, you will +see that they are brought to my quarters to-night at eight +o’clock. I desire to question them. In the meantime, see that +they are fed and clothed properly, for it is very cold.”</p> + +<p>The officer saluted, and the Grand Duke rode away, closely followed +by the members of his staff. At a sign from the officer in whose charge +they had been left, the lads followed him.</p> + +<p>Toward the rear of the army they continued their way, coming at last +upon a row of tents. Into one of these the officer led the way, the +lads and the dog following him.</p> + +<p>Here the officer quickly set out food, and the boys fell to with a +will, for it was a long time since a morsel had passed their lips. +Then, having satisfied their appetites, they informed the officer that +they would like to rest.</p> + +<p>The officer nodded, and showed them into another tent, where two +bunks had been prepared. With a word of thanks, the boys climbed in, +and the officer left them alone.</p> + +<p>“Well,” said Chester, “we have accomplished our +mission successfully. What are we going to do now?”</p> + +<p>“I have been thinking,” Hal replied, “of how life +on this side of the war arena would go.”</p> + +<p>“You mean stay here and not return to France?” asked +Chester.</p> + +<p>“Exactly. I have read that the Russian Cossacks are terrible +fighters. I would like to see some of them in action.”</p> + +<p>“And so would I,” declared Chester.</p> + +<p>“All right,” said Hal. “Then, if you are +agreeable, when we see the Grand Duke to-night, I shall ask him if he +cannot arrange to assign us to duties with the Russian army.”</p> + +<p>In another moment the two lads, tired out, were fast asleep, with +Marquis on guard.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_3'></a>CHAPTER III.<br /><span +class='fss'>UNDER THE BEAR.</span></h2> + +<p>“So, Your Excellency,” Hal concluded, “you may see +that we have had considerable active service.”</p> + +<p>The Russian Grand Duke Nicholas did not reply for some moments. It +was plain that he was greatly impressed, as he had been greatly +interested in the boys’ adventures since they had taken service +with the Allies just before the defense of Liège.</p> + +<p>“Yes,” he said at length, “you certainly have seen +considerable service; and, in bringing me this paper +safely”–the Grand Duke tapped his breast +pocket–“you have rendered an invaluable service to our +cause. I am indeed glad to know you. Now, if there is anything I can do +to show my appreciation, you may consider it done.”</p> + +<p>Remembering their conversation of a few hours before, Hal started to +speak, then hesitated. Realizing that the lad had something he felt a +delicacy of saying, the Grand Duke said:</p> + +<p>“Come, out with it. What can I do for you?”</p> + +<p>“Well, Your Excellency,” said Hal, “my friend and +I would like to see service with the Russian army.”</p> + +<p>“What!” exclaimed the Grand Duke.</p> + +<p>“Yes,” Chester broke into the conversation. “We +have talked it over, and we have decided that we would like to see +service in the Eastern theater of war.”</p> + +<p>“Hm-m-m,” said the Duke, stroking his mustache, +“and have you picked out the branch of the service to which you +would like to be attached?”</p> + +<p>“Yes, sir,” said Hal; “we have.”</p> + +<p>“And that is?” questioned the Grand Duke.</p> + +<p>“The cavalry, Your Excellency–the Cossacks.”</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke jumped to his feet in surprise.</p> + +<p>“Well, well!” he exclaimed. “You have certainly +picked out the most difficult thing you could have asked me. Still, I +have no doubt it can be arranged.”</p> + +<p>“If it will inconvenience you, your Excellency―” +Chester began.</p> + +<p>“Tut! Tut!” the Grand Duke interrupted him, with a wave +of his hand. “It shall be done. Consider the matter settled. Do +you know anything of the Cossacks?”</p> + +<p>“Why, yes, Your Excellency,” replied Hal. “We have +read considerable about them.”</p> + +<p>“Still,” said the Grand Duke, “I’ll warrant +you do not know overly much about them. I’ll tell you a little, +if you like.”</p> + +<p>“We would be glad to hear Your Excellency,” said +Chester.</p> + +<p>“The Cossacks,” said the Grand Duke, “from whom +the Russian cavalry is mainly drawn, form a community within the +Russian Empire enjoying special rights and privileges in return for +military service. Each Cossack village holds its land as a commune, and +the village assembly fixes local taxation and elects the local judges. +It has been estimated that the Cossacks will place 400,000 armed men in +the field in this war.</p> + +<p>“Both in historical writings and in fiction the Cossacks are +often represented as little better than savages. But this is a mistake, +for the level of education among the Cossacks is higher than in the +rest of Russia.</p> + +<p>“Now, the Cossacks have always been fighters–none better +in the world. They have won renown wherever they have fought by their +daring and bravery. But the Cossacks, to a certain degree, are +clannish–they do not take kindly to those not of their kind. +Which is the reason, as I said, you had made it hard for me when you +asked to be assigned to a Cossack regiment. By the way, can you +ride?”</p> + +<p>“Yes, Your Excellency,” replied Hal. “We are both +used to the saddle, having ridden much in America.”</p> + +<p>“Well,” said the Grand Duke, “I will see that it +is arranged. Report to me here in the morning.”</p> + +<p>The lads saluted and took their departure, returning to the spot +where they had sought rest only a few short hours before.</p> + +<p>It was about seven o’clock the following morning when they +again stood in the presence of the Grand Duke. With him was an officer +in a dark uniform, that gave evidence of having seen hard service, but +gaily bedecked nevertheless. He was a large man, fully six feet in +height, and built proportionately. The Grand Duke motioned the boys to +approach.</p> + +<p>“This,” he said, indicating the officer who stood beside +him, “is your future commander, General Ivan Jorvitch. I have +informed him of your request, and my command that it be +granted.”</p> + +<p>The lads saluted the general, and he acknowledged the salute +stiffly.</p> + +<p>“I am not at all sure as to how they will be received by the +men, sir,” he said to the Grand Duke.</p> + +<p>“You will see that they are well treated,” replied the +Grand Duke. “My commands are not to be treated lightly. These +lads will be attached to your staff with the rank of lieutenants. They +are not to serve in the ranks.”</p> + +<p>“Yes, your excellency,” said the general, saluting.</p> + +<p>“You will find, general,” continued the Grand Duke, +“that you may depend upon them to the limit. I fancy I am a good +judge of character. They have already done me an invaluable service. +They may do more.”</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke then proceeded to relate some of the lads’ +exploits and informed the general of the message they had brought.</p> + +<p>General Jorvitch thawed immediately upon hearing this, and extended +a hand to each lad in turn.</p> + +<p>“I shall be glad to have you with me,” he told them +sincerely. “I feared, at first, that the Grand Duke was trying an +experiment.”</p> + +<p>In spite of the general’s first gruffness the lads had taken a +liking to him. Straight and erect, with a flashing eye, he was the beau +ideal of a soldier. Still, there was a slight twinkle in the corner of +those same eyes, which proclaimed him a man, though stern, of a kindly +disposition.</p> + +<p>The lads thanked the general, and their interview with the Grand +Duke concluded, followed their new commander back to his quarters.</p> + +<p>“I have been ordered to advance,” the general informed +them as they made their way along, “and as soon as I have +introduced you to your fellow officers and procured you uniforms and +horses, we shall proceed.”</p> + +<p>An hour later, in true Russian garb and astride two fiery chargers, +the lads made their way forward with the rest of the troop. In all +there were probably 10,000 Cossacks in this advance.</p> + +<p>With one of the Cossack officers, a young lieutenant, huge in +stature and pleasant of face, the lads at once struck up a friendship. +He stood at least six feet six and seemed a Goliath in strength. He it +was who picked their horses for them, and obtained their uniforms. Some +of the other officers, while not openly hostile, still were disdainful +of the two boys, and plainly not well pleased with their company.</p> + +<p>“Have you any idea where we are bound?” asked Hal in +German of their new friend, who introduced himself with a swagger as +“Lieutenant Alexis Vergoff.”</p> + +<p>“Lodz; and when we get there we’ll make the Germans hard +to find,” was the answer, made in a loud, boasting tone.</p> + +<p>Hal and Chester glanced at each other and smiled quizzically. The +same thought was in the mind of each: “He talks too boastfully to +be much of a fighter.”</p> + +<p>Alexis noticed the interchange of glances, and the quizzical smiles. +He realized their meaning in an instant.</p> + +<p>“You think I won’t fight, eh?” he said loudly. +“Alexis Vergoff not fight? Ho! Ho!”</p> + +<p>He threw back his head and laughed loudly. The boys were not +impressed.</p> + +<p>“Worse and more of it,” thought Hal to himself.</p> + +<p>Chester was of the same opinion, but he did not say so aloud.</p> + +<p>“Why,” continued Alexis, “I’ve fought more +battles than you will ever hear of. I have killed twenty +men.”</p> + +<p>“Twenty is a good many,” said Hal softly.</p> + +<p>“True! True!” shouted Alexis, “but I’ll kill +twenty more in the next battle, just to show you. You shall see what +sort of a man Alexis Vergoff is!”</p> + +<p>“I am afraid we shall see too soon,” muttered Chester to +himself.</p> + +<p>“Why,” went on Alexis, “it was only a month ago, +before being ordered to the front, that I slew five men +single-handed!”</p> + +<p>“Great Scott!” muttered Hal. “I wish I had not +started him. He’ll never let up now.”</p> + +<p>“It was at my mother’s home,” continued Alexis. +“I reached home unexpectedly. Five men had surrounded her and +threatened to kill her unless she gave them money she kept in the +house. One had drawn a knife just as I entered the room. No one saw me +enter, and I was upon them before they knew it.</p> + +<p>“I picked up the man with the knife as though he had been a +child, and threw him bodily upon the other four. He had no time to +strike at me with his knife or even drop it. The other four went down +in a heap. The knife of the first man was buried in one of his +companions, and so there were only three who could stagger to their +feet. I picked up a lamp that stood on the table. This I hurled at +another. It struck him squarely on the head, and rebounded against the +head of another. Both men went down with cracked skulls. The fifth man +turned to flee, but picking up a knife, I hurled it after him. It stuck +in his back, and he ran half a mile before he fell down dead. The next +man jumped for me―”</p> + +<p>“Hold on!” said Hal, laughing. “You said there +were only five, and you have already killed them.”</p> + +<p>“True!” muttered Alexis, though in no wise taken aback. +“It was in another fight where I killed six men. I always get +them mixed up. In that fight―”</p> + +<p>“Save that for another time,” said Hal, restraining his +laughter with difficulty.</p> + +<p>“Don’t you want to hear it?” demanded Alexis in +surprise. “I always like to hear a story of a good +fight.”</p> + +<p>“I believe you would rather tell one,” replied Hal.</p> + +<p>Alexis looked very much crestfallen.</p> + +<p>“Do you think I made that up?” he asked in +consternation. “Why, I can tell you of other fights I have had +that―”</p> + +<p>“I don’t doubt it at all,” said Hal. “I am +willing to admit that you can draw the long bow to the Queen’s +taste.”</p> + +<p>“Draw the long bow?” repeated Alexis, puzzled. +“What do you mean?”</p> + +<p>“It wouldn’t do for me to tell you,” replied Hal +chuckling to himself. “Ask someone else.”</p> + +<p>Alexis turned to Chester.</p> + +<p>“Do you know what he means? Will you tell me?” he +asked.</p> + +<p>“Yes, I know what he means,” replied Chester, laughing, +“and I believe he is right. However, it wouldn’t do for me +to tell you either. You must ask someone else.”</p> + +<p>Alexis turned to the man on his right, and repeated his question. +The man acknowledged he knew no more what the expression meant than +Alexis himself.</p> + +<p>Alexis accosted several other officers, but with no better luck. He +turned to Hal aggrieved.</p> + +<p>“You should not have said that unless you tell me what you +mean,” he said.</p> + +<p>“Ask Colonel Bluekoff, perhaps he may tell you,” said +Hal.</p> + +<p>Alexis approached the Colonel.</p> + +<p>“What is it, sir?” asked the latter.</p> + +<p>“Colonel,” said Alexis, saluting, “can you tell me +what drawing the long bow means?”</p> + +<p>The colonel looked at him in amazement. Then he said sternly:</p> + +<p>“Get back to your place, sir. This is no time for +joking.”</p> + +<p>Alexis returned to his place.</p> + +<p>“Did he tell you?” asked Hal.</p> + +<p>“No,” replied Alexis, “but I’ll find out, if +I have to put off killing one of my enemies to ask him about +it.”</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_4'></a>CHAPTER IV.<br /><span +class='fss'>LODZ.</span></h2> + +<p>There came a sudden command from Colonel Bluekoff, and the regiment +to which Hal and Chester were attached galloped forward. The advance +guard could be seen falling back, firing as they retreated upon the +main body of cavalry. They had encountered a force of the enemy.</p> + +<p>With Colonel Bluekoff leading, his sword whirling about his head, +the troop dashed forward at a charge. As they went by, the retreating +advance guard reformed and also dashed forward with them. From ahead +came several puffs of smoke and the cracking of rifles, and here and +there a man fell to the ground. But the rest dashed on.</p> + +<p>The Cossacks did not fire a shot and soon the enemy had disappeared +in the distance.</p> + +<p>“A reconnoitering force that must have gotten around Lodz in +some way,” Colonel Bluekoff told his officers.</p> + +<p>The regiment now fell back upon the main body.</p> + +<p>“That’s two more,” said Alexis complacently to Hal +and Chester.</p> + +<p>“Two more what?” demanded Hal.</p> + +<p>“Two more of the enemy I have killed,” said Alexis +without a suspicion of a smile. “Didn’t you see them go +down when I fired?”</p> + +<p>“I didn’t know we fired a shot,” said Chester, +with a laugh.</p> + +<p>“Sh-h-h,” whispered Alexis, “do you want to get me +into trouble?”</p> + +<p>“Trouble,” said Chester. “What do you +mean?”</p> + +<p>“Don’t you know I’d get into trouble if the +colonel knew I had fired without orders, even though I killed two of +the enemy.”</p> + +<p>“Great Scott!” muttered Hal to himself. “He is the +limit.”</p> + +<p>Alexis showed his revolver to Hal and Chester.</p> + +<p>“Little invention of my own,” he said. “Now +I’ll leave it to you, you didn’t hear me when I fired, did +you?”</p> + +<p>“No,” said Chester emphatically, “I did +not.”</p> + +<p>“I knew it,” exclaimed Alexis triumphantly. “You +see,” he explained, patting the revolver, “that’s how +I was able to kill two of the enemy without you hearing the sound of my +revolver. Little invention of my own. No noise, no smoke.”</p> + +<p>Hal stretched out a hand.</p> + +<p>“Let me have a look at that wonderful weapon,” he +said.</p> + +<p>Alexis drew back, and returned the revolver quickly to its +place.</p> + +<p>“No,” he said seriously. “I wouldn’t trust +it out of my own hand. If it’s not handled just right, it might +get out of commission, and I don’t believe I could make another +like it.”</p> + +<p>Hal whistled softly to himself.</p> + +<p>“He’s the best I ever heard,” he said to himself, +“and I’ve heard a whole lot of ’em at one time or +another.”</p> + +<p>Alexis rode ahead as complacently as before, whistling softly to +himself, pausing once just long enough to turn to Hal and ask:</p> + +<p>“Have you decided yet to tell me what you mean by drawing the +long bow?”</p> + +<p>“While you have a gun like that in your possession, I +wouldn’t tell you for the world,” replied Hal.</p> + +<p>Now the column, at a command from General Jorvitch, increased its +pace. In the distance could be made out the buildings of a large +town.</p> + +<p>“Lodz,” said Alexis briefly, pointing ahead.</p> + +<p>Hal and Chester acknowledged they understood. The troop continued +onward.</p> + +<p>Lodz, an important railroad center, was one of the most important +towns in Poland, and the Grand Duke had decided that it must be held at +all hazards. There was already a large body of troops stationed there, +but the Grand Duke had not considered them sufficient to hold off the +ever-increasing horde of the Kaiser. Even now large masses of infantry +were being thrown forward to reënforce the troops already there.</p> + +<p>Acclaimed on all hands, the Cossacks rode rapidly through the town +and went into camp at the side facing the Germans. Outposts were thrown +out and the Cossacks sat down to a day of waiting.</p> + +<p>Having secured permission, Hal, Chester and Alexis walked back +toward the town. For several hours they strolled about, looking in the +windows, and purchasing several small articles.</p> + +<p>The people of Lodz were serene in their belief that there was no +danger of a German invasion, in spite of the nearness of the foe. Shops +and stores, theaters and all buildings were gaily decorated, and +thousands promenaded the streets. The city was in festival attire.</p> + +<p>“Looks like they were preparing for a celebration,” Hal +remarked to Chester.</p> + +<p>“I should say it does,” the latter returned. “But +it wouldn’t take the Germans long to wreck the town, if they once +got here. You remember Louvain?”</p> + +<p>“Well, they won’t get here,” Alexis broke in. +“One Cossack is always good for ten Germans. Why, I +remember―”</p> + +<p>“Tell us later,” Hal interrupted. “We want to look +about a little now.”</p> + +<p>The three entered a store, where, Alexis’ eye having been +caught by a red necktie, the Cossack purchased it. The necktie in his +pocket, he leaned over the counter and asked the salesman:</p> + +<p>“Say, what does drawing the long bow mean?”</p> + +<p>Hal and Chester burst into a loud guffaw, and the salesman, drawing +back, suddenly turned and disappeared.</p> + +<p>A man in civilian garb, who stood nearby, also broke into a loud +guffaw. Alexis turned on him angrily.</p> + +<p>“What are you laughing at?” he demanded.</p> + +<p>“Why, I’m laughing at you,” replied the man +calmly. “What about it?”</p> + +<p>Plainly Alexis was astonished at this reply. He drew back.</p> + +<p>“Oh, I guess it’s all right,” he said pleasantly. +“I wasn’t sure, that’s all.”</p> + +<p>“And who are these children you have with you?” demanded +the man.</p> + +<p>Hal answered this question himself.</p> + +<p>“None of your business,” he said shortly.</p> + +<p>“Is that so?” said the man, stepping forward. +“What if I should make it some of my business?”</p> + +<p>Hal smiled.</p> + +<p>“I don’t think you will,” he said quietly.</p> + +<p>The man, large, though somewhat stout, with a red, evil-looking +face, stepped quickly forward, and tapped Hal lightly on the cheek with +his hand.</p> + +<p>“Let that teach you not to talk back to your elders,” he +said.</p> + +<p>“And let that teach you not to interfere in other +people’s business,” said Hal, also taking a step forward, +and tapping his opponent lightly on the cheek.</p> + +<p>The man grew very angry, and his face turned a dull red. He raised +his cane, and struck sharply at Hal. But Hal was not there, and a +moment later the man received a sharp jolt on the jaw as Hal’s +fist went home.</p> + +<p>The man let out a string of epithets and rushed at the boy. But the +latter was prepared for him, and drove him back with straight rights +and lefts; one blow brought a tiny stream of blood from the man’s +nose.</p> + +<p>He drew back.</p> + +<p>“You will answer for that,” he said quietly, and +turning, walked off.</p> + +<p>Hal shrugged his shoulders, and at that moment the salesman whom +Alexis had frightened a few moments before came back.</p> + +<p>“Do you know who that was?” he asked of Hal.</p> + +<p>“No,” replied the lad, “and what’s more, I +don’t care.”</p> + +<p>“Well,” said the salesman, “the man whom you just +struck is Count de Reslau, and he is very influential. You have made a +bad enemy.”</p> + +<p>“I don’t care if he is the King of Poland,” +replied Hal. “No man can hit me and get away without a return +blow.”</p> + +<p>Alexis, meanwhile, had been gazing at Hal in astonishment. Now he +approached and laid a hand on the lad’s arm.</p> + +<p>“A real fighter!” he exclaimed. “A man after my +own heart!”</p> + +<p>“I didn’t see you doing much fighting just a moment +ago,” said Hal, somewhat nettled.</p> + +<p>“Of course not,” replied Alexis. “Do you think I +wanted to get in trouble? Suppose an officer had come along?”</p> + +<p>“Well,” said Hal, “suppose he had?”</p> + +<p>“If he had, we would have lost our liberty for all time to +come.”</p> + +<p>“And is that why you didn’t fight?”</p> + +<p>“Yes! Discipline in the Russian army is more strict than in +any army in the world; but you are certainly a fighter. The way you +stood up to that man reminds me of the time I―”</p> + +<p>“Come on,” broke in Chester, not wanting to hear any +more bluster, “and let’s get out of here.”</p> + +<p>The three left the store, and continued their stroll about the town. +As they were passing an unfrequented corner, six men suddenly sprang +out upon them, armed with clubs and knives.</p> + +<p>Hal and Chester immediately backed up against a wall, and turned to +fight off their assailants; but not so Alexis.</p> + +<p>With a loud shout he rushed upon the six who had attacked them. +Right and left flew his huge fists, striking out blindly. One man +toppled to the ground. A stabbing wrist was caught in the +Cossack’s great hand, and thrown twisting through the air. And at +the same time Alexis called to Hal and Chester:</p> + +<p>“Now you shall see how Alexis can fight!”</p> + +<p>But Hal and Chester had no mind to let Alexis fight the whole crowd +of assailants. They sprang to his aid.</p> + +<p>Alexis drove his right fist, with tremendous power behind it, right +into the face of the second man, and the latter went down to rise no +more for some time to come.</p> + +<p>Hal, with a sudden spring, clinched with one of the assailants, and +the two went tumbling to the ground. Chester and another of the enemy +were also rolling on the ground.</p> + +<p>Alexis reached one huge hand and grasped another of the foe by the +back of the neck, and lifted him, kicking and struggling, from his +feet. The last man turned to flee, but he had reckoned without the +giant Cossack.</p> + +<p>Still holding one man by the scruff of the neck, the Cossack took a +step forward and, with his free hand, grasped the last man by the back +of the neck also. Then, holding one in either hand, he walked calmly to +where Hal and his opponent were engaged.</p> + +<p>Hal was uppermost, and Alexis, seizing a chance when the lad’s +head was out of the way, dashed the man he held in his left hand, +headfirst, against the head of the enemy on the ground. There was a +crunch, and both men lay still.</p> + +<p>Then, with his other victim in his left hand, Alexis walked over to +where Chester and his opponent were rolling about, and performed a +similar operation. Then he lent each lad a hand in getting to his feet, +after which he turned and surveyed the field of battle.</p> + +<p>“Six!” he said briefly. “That’s enough for +one day. Come on! Let’s get away from here before some officer +comes along and sees us.”</p> + +<p>Both boys looked at the giant Cossack with amazement written large +upon their faces. From the first time that he had boasted to them, they +had put him down as anything but a fighter, in spite of his huge size. +But the quickness with which he had disposed of six men showed them +that they had been wrong.</p> + +<p>As they walked along, it was plain to the lads that something was +troubling Alexis; and at last Hal was moved to ask:</p> + +<p>“What’s the matter, Alexis?”</p> + +<p>The huge Cossack looked at the lad for a moment, and then said:</p> + +<p>“There is no use my telling you, but I will. I want to know +what you meant by ‘drawing the long bow.’”</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_5'></a>CHAPTER V.<br /><span +class='fss'>ALEXIS IN BATTLE.</span></h2> + +<p>Both lads laughed heartily.</p> + +<p>“You’ll learn before many days,” said Hal, +“and I am not as sure as I was about it.”</p> + +<p>“Nor I,” agreed Chester.</p> + +<p>The three made their way back to their posts, where Alexis +immediately insisted on donning his new red necktie. Marquis, who had +been left behind while the three friends made a tour of the city, +greeted them with joyful barks. He had made friends with the big +Cossack, and the latter had taken quite a fancy to the dog.</p> + +<p>Hardly had the three retired to their positions, when an air of +excitement throughout the troops became apparent. There was bustle and +some slight confusion and shouted commands. A moment later and a body +of 5,000 Cossacks, armed and spurred, stood beside their horses, ready +to mount and ride at the command.</p> + +<p>“Where do you suppose we are going?” asked Hal of +Chester.</p> + +<p>“Haven’t any idea,” was the reply, “but it +looks as though there was a little fighting to be done.”</p> + +<p>“That’s what!” exclaimed Alexis, who stood beside +the two lads. “Now you shall see how we handle the +Germans.”</p> + +<p>“Mount!” came the command.</p> + +<p>As one man, the troop sprang to the saddle.</p> + +<p>“Forward!” came the next order, and the Cossacks started +forward at a gallop.</p> + +<p>Good riders themselves, Hal and Chester could not but envy the +riding prowess of their companions. Accounted among the best riders in +the world, the Cossacks who now dashed forward hurled themselves toward +the enemy with reckless abandon. Their lances held high in one hand, +each brandished a large revolver in his other. The bridles lay across +the horses’ necks, the riders guiding their mounts by the +pressure of their knees.</p> + +<p>And so they swept forward, dashing swiftly over the few miles of +open ground toward the spot where the Germans were known to be +entrenched.</p> + +<p>The enemy greeted them with a hail of bullets, but they faltered +not. Men fell and horses dropped, but there was no hesitation among +those left.</p> + +<p>Now a bugle sounded, and they dashed on with greater ferocity than +before.</p> + +<p>Squadrons of German cavalry issued forth to meet them. They crashed +with a terrible shock. The impact was terrific, and horses and riders +on both sides reeled back.</p> + +<p>But the Cossacks were the first to recover, and they spurred their +horses into the thick of the enemy. The sweep of their lances and the +fire from their automatics were deadly. There was no pause in the +Russian attack.</p> + +<p>Cutting and slashing, the squadron to which Hal, Chester and Alexis +were attached was soon in the midst of the foe. Not unused to such +encounters, the lads nevertheless found themselves hard put to keep +their seats and ward off the blows of their foes.</p> + +<p>But with each moment they gained confidence, and finally were +fighting with the best of them. Hal caught a descending lance on his +upraised sword, and raising his revolver took a snap shot at his +opponent. The latter threw his arms high, and toppled from his horse. +Chester, by a quick move, escaped a revolver shot aimed at him by a +German officer, and the lad’s own weapon spoke sharply. His aim +was true, and the German dropped.</p> + +<p>Now the Germans began to give ground. It was impossible to stand in +the face of the terrible Cossack charge. The Russians pressed the +retreating foe closely.</p> + +<p>But now new forces of Germans dashed forward to drive back the +Cossacks, or at least to protect the retreat of their companions.</p> + +<p>The Cossacks dashed into these fresh troops with the same abandon +they had first charged. But this time the result was different. Tired +by the furious work, they were thrown back by the German +reënforcements, and in spite of heroic efforts, were forced to retire +slowly.</p> + +<p>Flushed with this success, the Germans pressed on. The fighting was +man to man, horse to horse, and hand to hand. Not for once had Alexis +left the side of the two lads and none of the three had so far been +injured, although men dropped on all sides of them.</p> + +<p>Suddenly there came a command from Colonel Bluekoff.</p> + +<p>“Charge!” he cried.</p> + +<p>Immediately the squadron to which the lads were attached hurled +itself forward once more, right into the thickest of the fray, in the +face of overwhelming numbers. They dashed forward with the fury of +madmen, shouting and yelling as they charged.</p> + +<p>For a moment the Germans gave back, so terrible was the charge of +this mere handful of Cossacks, but for a moment only; then they came on +again. From all sides they bore down on the squadron, now completely +cut off from the main body of troops, seeking to annihilate them.</p> + +<p>There was no order to surrender from the German commander, nor would +one have been heeded for the matter of that. At a quick command, the +Cossacks formed a little square, back to back, and awaited the attack +of the enemy.</p> + +<p>It came upon the instant. Upon the Russian horsemen the Germans +hurled themselves bravely, cutting and shooting as they came on. The +Cossacks gave blow for blow, and in spite of the fierce charge, +maintained their unbroken front, though men fell here and there. Unable +to pierce this line of steel, the Germans drew off.</p> + +<p>Given this little breathing space, Hal and Chester, standing side by +side, took in the scene about them. Of the little troop of Cossacks +there remained now possibly a hundred men. Their support, the lads +could see, desperately engaged elsewhere, would be unable to come to +their assistance. It was up to them to fight it out alone.</p> + +<p>Colonel Bluekoff was down, having been pierced a few moments before +by a German bullet. Among these few men there were, besides Alexis, but +two minor officers unharmed. At that moment Alexis himself took +command.</p> + +<p>His sword raised aloft, he turned flashing eyes upon his men.</p> + +<p>“Will we surrender?” he shouted, and answered his own +question: “No!”</p> + +<p>A wild cheer from his men was the reply. The huge Cossack turned to +the two lads.</p> + +<p>“We will fight till the last,” he said calmly. +“Are you with us?”</p> + +<p>“We are,” said Hal simply.</p> + +<p>“You bet!” Chester agreed.</p> + +<p>“Good!” exclaimed Alexis.</p> + +<p>He turned once more toward the enemy, who, it was evident, were +preparing for another attack upon the little band. The latter stood +quietly, awaiting the charge; and in a moment it came.</p> + +<p>Urging their horses on at a gallop, the Germans came rapidly +forward. There was the clash of steel on steel as the enemy hurled +themselves upon three sides of the little square simultaneously. +Russians and Germans dropped together, fighting till the last.</p> + +<p>But the odds against them were too great. Dense masses of the +Germans swooped down upon them, engulfing them, overpowering them. Hal, +engaged with a big German officer, had just succeeded in parrying a +thrust of the other’s sword, when someone from behind struck him +a heavy blow over the head. The lad fell from his horse without a +sound.</p> + +<p>Chester, seeing his friend fall, fought his way toward Hal. He was +just about to leap from his horse by his chum’s side, when a tall +German trooper brought the flat of his sword down on the lad’s +head. Chester also went hurtling to the ground.</p> + +<p>And now Alexis, with a few remaining men, was left to fight the +enemy alone. His sword whirling around his head in great sweeps, and an +empty revolver clutched tightly in his left hand; his teeth bared in a +snarl and his eyes flashing angrily, this great Cossack stood off his +foes.</p> + +<p>Four men sprang upon him at once. Putting spurs to his horse, the +giant dashed in between them. Two he cut down with lightning-like +slashes of his sword, and a third he disposed of by hurling his empty +revolver squarely into his face. The sword of the fourth pierced him +through the left arm, but before the German could regain his balance +after this thrust, Alexis’ sweeping sword had laid him low +also.</p> + +<p>The giant Cossack was now the last of his troop in condition to +fight. Suddenly his horse staggered, and went to its knees. With a +quick move, Alexis freed himself and leaped from the saddle just as the +animal, dying from a pistol wound in its head, toppled to the +ground.</p> + +<p>Alexis leaped up lightly and turned again to face his foes.</p> + +<p>A German officer urged his horse forward, seeking to ride him down. +As the horse approached, Alexis fell on one knee, and the horse, +pierced by his sword, fell to the ground. The officer leaped from the +animal’s back, but before he could bring his revolver to bear +upon Alexis, the latter had pierced him through with a thrust of his +sword.</p> + +<p>A dozen of the enemy sprang upon him. With his sword sweeping around +his head, seeming to make a circle of fire, the great Cossack held them +at bay. One ventured to spring at him, and without even stopping the +whirl of his weapon, Alexis dropped him at his feet.</p> + +<p>More Germans sprang to the attack–ten, twenty, thirty of them. +Hopelessly outnumbered, and believing that the end was near, Alexis +gave up his defensive tactics and leaped into the very midst of his +foes. For a moment they gave way before him, then closed in again like +a pack of hungry wolves. Here and there the giant’s sword darted +out and men dropped beneath its thrust.</p> + +<p>Cutting and thrusting with his dripping sword, and striking out with +his naked fist, Alexis fought on. A sword pierced him through the +shoulder, but the man who had aimed the thrust paid the penalty with +his life. Two men closed in, and as the Cossack struck out at the one +on his left with his fist, the second German seized his sword arm.</p> + +<p>With a roar like that of an angry bull, Alexis gave a mighty wrench, +and the sword came free. At the same moment he felt a sting in his +right arm. A bullet had struck him. The giant scarcely felt his wounds, +although he was bleeding now in a dozen places. Before him, the ground +was full of dark swaying faces. His sword found another human sheath, +and being unable to withdraw it quickly enough to meet another of his +foes, he left it there and turned upon his enemies with his bare +hands.</p> + +<p>He snatched a revolver from the ground, and not taking time to aim, +dashed it into the face of the nearest man, and then dashed forward, +hitting out with his naked fists.</p> + +<p>Vaguely he noticed the sameness of the faces about him. A short wiry +man sprang at him, and with a broken sword, stabbed him in the left +shoulder. Alexis caught him by the throat with his right hand, and the +man gave a choking screech as he lifted him clear off the ground.</p> + +<p>As he did so, someone behind him struck him a heavy blow on the head +with the butt of a revolver. With a last furious effort he turned upon +his foes, and dashed the man he held by the throat full into their +faces; fell forward upon the body and, with a great sob, he shuddered +and lay still.</p> + +<p>And there, on the battlefield on the plains of Poland, lay the +bodies of the two American lads and, a short distance away, that of +Alexis, the giant Cossack, their friend.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_6'></a>CHAPTER VI.<br /><span +class='fss'>MARQUIS.</span></h2> + +<p>The Russian cavalry, outnumbered by the Germans, had continued to +give ground and the Germans were still in pursuit. But now, from the +distance arose a cloud of dust, and a moment later, in a headlong dash +to save their companions, came a second body of Cossack cavalry, 5,000 +strong, to give battle to the Germans.</p> + +<p>Down they came upon the unprepared Germans, with yells and shouts, +their horses running free. At the same time that part of the first +Cossack body which still remained reformed and sprang forward.</p> + +<p>The Germans turned and fled.</p> + +<p>Then from the trenches came forth columns of infantry, supported by +field batteries, and in a moment these had opened upon the advancing +Russian horsemen; but in spite of this hail of death, the Cossacks did +not falter nor pause. Straight up to the mouth of the field guns they +rode–sabering the gunners right and left–and in a few +moments these had been silenced.</p> + +<p>Then the Cossacks turned their attention to the infantry, which, +firing with machine-like precision and accuracy, dealt havoc to the +ranks of the Russian horsemen and mowed them down.</p> + +<p>Several squadrons of Cossacks dismounted and approached the foe on +foot, and soon the fighting became hand to hand. The standard-bearer +suddenly threw up his hands and fell over backward, the colors +fluttering to the ground.</p> + +<p>A German officer, thinking to capture the flag, jumped forward, and +leaning down laid his hand upon it; but at that moment a hairy, +snarling body sprang forward, straight at the German’s throat. +The latter released his hold on the flag and jumped to his feet to ward +off the attack of this strange enemy, which he could not at first make +out.</p> + +<p>But this new enemy was not to be shaken off. His teeth found their +mark, and with a cry, the German tumbled to earth.</p> + +<p>The newcomer was Marquis.</p> + +<p>Separated from Hal and Chester, Marquis, though a battle dog, had +become uneasy at their absence and set out to find them. He had +advanced with the second troop of Cossacks, and seeing the dead upon +the field, had been trying to pick out the bodies of the two lads.</p> + +<p>But when the Russian standard-bearer, almost beside him, had been +shot down and the German had leaped for the colors, Marquis had turned +from the search of his friends to dispose of his lifelong enemy.</p> + +<p>As Marquis’ foe went to the ground, a second German sprang +forward and, aiming a kick at the dog, also stooped and started to +raise the colors. Marquis, disregarding the kick, seized upon the flag +with his teeth at the same moment.</p> + +<p>Then came a tug of war. Snarling, and with bristling back, Marquis +pulled at the standard. Crying out hoarse epithets, the German pulled +also; but neither made any headway.</p> + +<p>Realizing that the dog was a match for him, the German uttered a +fierce imprecation, dropped his hold on the flag, stepped back and +aimed his revolver.</p> + +<p>But the dog was ready for him. He had released his hold upon the +flag almost as soon as had the German, and his canine reasoning told +him the German’s object. Before the German could pull the +trigger, Marquis was ready for him, and hurled his body straight at the +German’s throat.</p> + +<p>He had gauged the distance accurately enough, and beneath the shock +the officer was hurled to the ground. He attempted to fight off his +four-footed assailant, but he was no match for the angry dog.</p> + +<p>This adversary disposed of, Marquis calmly returned to the flag, +picked it up in his mouth, carried it to the commander of the squadron +and put it in his hand. The commander took the time to pat Marquis on +the head, and utter some words of praise.</p> + +<p>But Marquis had no time to listen to these. He had other work to do, +and had disappeared almost before the Cossack ceased speaking.</p> + +<p>Hither and thither over the field of battle Marquis made his way, +sniffing the bodies of the dead, and licking the faces of the wounded. +For an hour he wandered about, and at last his search was rewarded.</p> + +<p>From near him came a feeble moan. Marquis pricked up his ears. +Surely he recognized that voice. The moan came again. Marquis hesitated +no longer. He had recognized the voice of Hal. Quickly he sprang to +where the lad lay and poked his cold muzzle into the boy’s +face.</p> + +<p>Hal turned feebly on his side and put out a hand before he realized +what had touched him. Then he succeeded in raising himself on one arm +and threw the other around Marquis’ neck.</p> + +<p>“Marquis!” he almost sobbed. “Where is +Chester?”</p> + +<p>Apparently the dog understood his question, for he jumped away and +began nosing other bodies nearby. And at last he came upon Chester. The +latter also was returning to consciousness. With some difficulty Hal +staggered to his feet and made his way to his friend’s side. He +turned to Marquis.</p> + +<p>“Get some water!” he commanded, and paused to see if the +dog understood.</p> + +<p>Marquis bounded away, and returned a few moments later with a +well-filled canteen, in his mouth. Hastily Hal removed the stopper and +poured some of the water down Chester’s throat. Then he took a +drink himself.</p> + +<p>Thus refreshed, Chester sat up and looked around. Hal did the same. +It was indeed a terrible sight that met their eyes. As far as they +could see, bodies of dead and wounded men lay scattered about. Hal +shuddered.</p> + +<p>“Terrible!” he exclaimed. Then: “I wonder where +Alexis is?” He turned to Marquis. “Find Alexis,” he +commanded.</p> + +<p>Marquis understood and trotted away. Chester and Hal now arose and +walked slowly after him. At last Marquis, some distance away, set up a +loud bark. Hal and Chester approached as rapidly as their exhausted +condition would permit.</p> + +<p>Marquis was standing directly over the body of the giant Cossack, +surrounded by a circle of the enemies whom Alexis had slain in +combat.</p> + +<p>The giant stirred slightly as the boys approached. Quickly Hal bent +over him and, raising his head upon his knee, placed the canteen to his +lips.</p> + +<p>This brought a sigh from Alexis’ lips, and soon he sat up and +looked around.</p> + +<p>“Well,” said he, waving his arm toward the circle of his +fallen foes, “you can see what a Cossack does when he +fights.”</p> + +<p>“I see,” said Hal briefly. “But come, if you are +able to walk. We had better get away from this spot. The battle is not +over.”</p> + +<p>Alexis objected.</p> + +<p>“What, a Cossack run!” he demanded.</p> + +<p>“But if we stay here we shall probably be killed,” +replied Chester. “See,” pointing, “even now the +Cossacks are retreating in the face of superior numbers. We must +go.”</p> + +<p>“I don’t―” began Alexis, but Hal interrupted +him.</p> + +<p>“Come on,” he said, taking him by the arm. +“Let’s move away from here.”</p> + +<p>Grumbling and protesting, the giant allowed himself to be led toward +the head of the Cossack line, now some distance back. Bullets and +shells were still whistling overhead, for the three were between the +opposing forces. None dropped near them, however, and they continued on +their way.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, from the German line, came the clear call of a bugle.</p> + +<p>“Quick!” shouted Hal, hurrying forward. “The +Germans are going to charge. We mustn’t be caught in +between.”</p> + +<p>But it was too late. Even as the lad spoke, the German cavalry came +forward with a rush.</p> + +<p>Hal realized in an instant that they would not have time to rejoin +the main body of Cossacks, for should the latter advance to meet the +charge, they would not do so rapidly enough to come up to them before +the Germans. Should the Cossacks retreat, the three could not possibly +hope to come up with them.</p> + +<p>Fortunately the three were at the extreme east of the battle line; +so now, turning quickly, Hal led the way out of danger. When far enough +away so that there was little likelihood of being struck by stray +bullets, they halted to witness the progress of the battle.</p> + +<p>The Cossacks advanced to meet the charge of the German cavalry, and +threw it back upon its infantry support, which once more issued from +the trenches. German field guns were unlimbered and hurled their shells +screeching at the Russians. The latter were forced to retreat.</p> + +<p>The Germans pushed this advantage closely.</p> + +<p>“If we only had infantry or artillery here,” groaned +Alexis, “there would be a different story to tell.”</p> + +<p>“I’m sure of that,” replied Hal; “but to +advance in the face of such overwhelming numbers would be +foolish.”</p> + +<p>“True,” said Alexis, “but I never like to see a +Cossack run from his foes, no matter what their number.”</p> + +<p>It was plain now that the Russian commander realized the futility of +further fighting with his vastly superior foe. The Cossacks gave way +more rapidly and finally turned and began their retreat upon Lodz.</p> + +<p>“And here we are right in the middle of the Germans,” +said Chester. “What are we going to do?”</p> + +<p>“We’ll have to try to get back to our lines,” said +Hal, “and the sooner we start the better.”</p> + +<p>“Good,” said Chester. “Let’s start at +once.”</p> + +<p>Alexis had so far recovered now as to announce that he was feeling +“perfectly fit,” and making a slight detour, the three +friends, closely followed by Marquis, set out.</p> + +<p>They had progressed possibly half a mile, when Marquis suddenly +began to growl.</p> + +<p>“What do you suppose is the matter with him?” demanded +Chester.</p> + +<p>“I don’t know,” replied Hal. “Evidently he +scents some kind of danger.” He turned to the dog. “What is +it, Marquis?” he demanded.</p> + +<p>Marquis’ only answer was a series of deep growls.</p> + +<p>“Germans?” asked Hal.</p> + +<p>Marquis uttered a short bark.</p> + +<p>“That’s what’s the matter,” said Hal, +quietly.</p> + +<p>At that moment there came riding down a nearby road a troop of +German cavalry.</p> + +<p>“Quick! down on the ground!” cried Hal. “Perhaps +they won’t see us!”</p> + +<p>He suited the action to the word, and Chester and Alexis followed +his example.</p> + +<p>But it was too late. The Germans had espied them and now came toward +them at a gallop. Alexis rose to his feet and stretched.</p> + +<p>“Another fight,” he said. “Good!”</p> + +<p>“Fight nothing!” exclaimed Hal. “It’s +impossible. They have us. That’s all there is about it. We shall +have to submit.”</p> + +<p>The Germans came to a sudden halt a few feet away, and rifles were +brought to bear upon the three friends.</p> + +<p>“You are our prisoners!” called the German +commander.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_7'></a>CHAPTER VII.<br /><span +class='fss'>GERMANY’S NAPOLEON.</span></h2> + +<p>Hal raised his hands in token of surrender.</p> + +<p>“There is no help for it,” he said to his two friends in +an undertone.</p> + +<p>The German commander motioned the three to approach. They did +so.</p> + +<p>“You will each climb up behind one of my men,” ordered +the German leader.</p> + +<p>Hal and Chester did as ordered, but when Alexis approached one of +the German horsemen the latter eyed him dubiously.</p> + +<p>“Man!” he exclaimed. “You can’t ride with +me. You would break this horse in two.”</p> + +<p>The officer turned to the soldier.</p> + +<p>“Give your horse to the prisoner,” he commanded, +“and you climb up behind the man nearest you.”</p> + +<p>The soldier did as commanded, and a moment later Alexis also was in +the saddle. Then the little troop got under way again, headed for the +German lines.</p> + +<p>There was no conversation as the little troop rode along, and at +length they were well inside the German trenches. Here, after some +delay, the three prisoners were conducted before General von +Hindenburg, the Teuton commander in the East, a man of kindly face and +courteous bearing, the man whose successes, brief though they were, +earned him the name of “The German Napoleon.”</p> + +<p>“How comes it,” asked General von Hindenburg of Hal, +“that you two American lads are fighting with the Russians? How +comes it that two lads born and reared in a civilized country have +espoused the cause of the barbarians?”</p> + +<p>“In the first place,” answered Hal boldly, “I do +not consider the Russians barbarians. In the next place, we joined the +Allies when the Germans ravaged Belgium.”</p> + +<p>“Ravaged!” exclaimed the German commander with some +heat.</p> + +<p>“Exactly,” said Hal. “We joined the Belgian army +before Liège, and we hold commissions in the Belgian army. We were also +attached for a time to the British forces under Sir John French. We +bore communications from Sir John French to Grand Duke Nicholas, that +is how we happen to be here.”</p> + +<p>“And how did you carry these dispatches, may I ask?” +inquired General von Hindenburg.</p> + +<p>“By airship,” replied Hal briefly.</p> + +<p>“What!” cried the general. “You flew over Germany +in an airship?”</p> + +<p>“Well, only part of it,” replied Hal with a grin; and +seeing no harm, he told the German commander of their adventures after +being captured and taken to Berlin.</p> + +<p>“You are brave lads,” said the general calmly, when Hal +had finished. “I would that Germany had more like you. But I fear +your fighting days are over.”</p> + +<p>“What will you do with us, General?” asked Chester, who +up to this time had remained silent, Hal usually acting as spokesman +when there was explaining to be done.</p> + +<p>“You will be sent to Posen,” replied the general, +“where you will be detained until after the war.”</p> + +<p>“But that may be for years, General,” protested Hal, +trying to draw the general out.</p> + +<p>In this he was successful.</p> + +<p>“You are mistaken,” replied General von Hindenburg +calmly. “The war will be over within the next six months. Germany +will have conquered.”</p> + +<p>Hal did not reply, for he had no mind to antagonize the general; but +he had his own ideas as to the ultimate outcome of the war.</p> + +<p>The general now summoned one of his staff, and turned the lads over +to the latter with this injunction:</p> + +<p>“Have them sent to Posen. Instruct Commander Friech that they +must be well guarded, but treated with kindness.”</p> + +<p>He bowed gravely to both lads, who saluted and followed the other +officer from the German commander’s quarters.</p> + +<p>“You will remain in my quarters until to-night,” said +the officer to the three friends, “and you probably will start on +your journey about midnight. There is a detachment leaving about that +time.”</p> + +<p>He conducted the three and the dog to his tent, where their wounds +were dressed and a guard was stationed over them. Then they were left +to themselves.</p> + +<p>Alexis, who up to this time had not spoken, at last opened his +mouth.</p> + +<p>“What’s this all about?” he demanded. “I +can’t understand this outlandish gibberish. What’s it all +about, anyhow?”</p> + +<p>The conversation between the lads and the German officers had been +in English.</p> + +<p>Chester broke into a laugh.</p> + +<p>“Outlandish gibberish!” he exclaimed. “Why, +Alexis, if you only knew how your native tongue sounds, you +wouldn’t call anything gibberish. It’s fortunate you speak +German.”</p> + +<p>“Well, perhaps so,” Alexis agreed. “But +what’s it all about?”</p> + +<p>“Simply,” said Hal, “that we are to be taken to +Posen, where we will be held prisoners till after the war.”</p> + +<p>Alexis uttered a loud Russian imprecation.</p> + +<p>“I was in hope,” he said, “that when I went into +East Prussia it would be as part of an army too big for the Germans +ever to drive out.”</p> + +<p>“It can’t be helped now,” said Chester +briefly.</p> + +<p>“It would have been helped if you had let me fight when I +wanted to,” said the big Cossack regretfully.</p> + +<p>All day long the three were kept close inside the tent. Not once +were they permitted to step into the open. Night fell, and food was +placed before them. They were almost famished, so they ate heartily, +sharing their meal with Marquis. It was well along toward midnight when +the German officer once more entered the tent and informed them it was +time for them to leave.</p> + +<p>They followed the officer into the open air, where a large body of +men were ready to move. Quickly they were led to horses, and were soon +in the saddle. Then, closely guarded, they were led away at a swift +trot.</p> + +<p>The German camp was some miles from the nearest railroad station, +and it took several hours to cover this distance. At last, however, +they were conducted aboard a train, where, under heavy guard, they +continued their journey.</p> + +<p>It was well along toward the next evening when the train, after many +stops, finally pulled into Posen. With a number of other prisoners, the +three friends and Marquis, who had been allowed to accompany them, were +taken from the train and turned over to another squad of troops. In the +center of these they were led to a large and massive castle at one end +of the town. Here they were thrust into a dark though well-appointed +room, which, their guard informed them, was to be their prison.</p> + +<p>“So this is where we are to spend the next few years, +eh?” said Chester.</p> + +<p>“The outlook is not very bright,” replied Hal, +“but we shall have to make the best of a bad +situation.”</p> + +<p>The three began a careful survey of their prison. There were two +large windows in the room, looking out into a little court. Through +these a dim light streamed. The windows were heavily barred. Hal and +Chester tested the bars. Alexis, however, after one look, sat down in +deep disgust. If his wounds bothered him any, he did not seem to mind +them.</p> + +<p>“No chance of escape here,” said Hal, after shaking one +of the heavy iron bars.</p> + +<p>“I should say not,” agreed Chester, after making a +test.</p> + +<p>They turned from the windows just as a key grated in the lock of the +heavy door, and a man of huge stature, topping the giant frame of +Alexis by more than an inch, entered the room.</p> + +<p>“Good evening,” he said politely enough. “I have +come to see if you require anything. We have been instructed to treat +you kindly.”</p> + +<p>“A little liberty is about all,” said Hal, with a rueful +smile.</p> + +<p>“I am sorry,” replied the newcomer, also smiling +slightly, “but that is the one thing I cannot grant you. I +suppose you wonder who I am?”</p> + +<p>The boys nodded.</p> + +<p>“I,” said the newcomer, striking himself a hard blow on +the chest, “am Freiderich von Bernstrum, brother of Heinrich von +Bernstrum, commander of this fortress, and I am kept cooped up here +while there is fighting to be done–me, Freiderich von Bernstrum, +a real fighter!”</p> + +<p>“Hm-m-m,” muttered Hal to himself as he glanced keenly +at Alexis. “Two of a kind.”</p> + +<p>Alexis moved restlessly as the big German made this boast. It was +plain to both lads that, while he might like to brag himself, he did +not relish hearing another do so.</p> + +<p>“Yes,” continued von Bernstrum, “I would go to the +front. But my brother, he would stay here. You see,” and the +talkative German leaned closer to the lads, “he has a fair +captive in the tower above, and he seeks to marry her.”</p> + +<p>“And who is she?” demanded Hal.</p> + +<p>“I will mention no names,” replied the German. +“Enough that she is a Russian countess.”</p> + +<p>Alexis jumped to his feet and advanced upon the big German.</p> + +<p>“You have dared to lay a hand upon a Russian lady?” he +demanded.</p> + +<p>The German eyed him amusedly.</p> + +<p>“And what of it?” he demanded. “However, you need +have no fear. She prefers me, and I shall take her away from +him.”</p> + +<p>Alexis raised a threatening hand, but Hal stayed him.</p> + +<p>“Quiet,” he whispered. “Some good may come of this +if you obey me.”</p> + +<p>Alexis subsided.</p> + +<p>Hal approached Chester and whispered.</p> + +<p>“Keep von Bernstrum in conversation while I have a word with +Alexis.”</p> + +<p>Chester did as Hal ordered, and the latter whispered to the big +Cossack:</p> + +<p>“Do you think you can whip this man?” pointing to von +Bernstrum.</p> + +<p>Alexis’ fingers twitched.</p> + +<p>“Remember you are wounded, Alexis.”</p> + +<p>“Try me,” he said simply.</p> + +<p>“Keep quiet, then, and do as I tell you,” said Hal.</p> + +<p>He turned again to von Bernstrum.</p> + +<p>“I can see,” he said, “that the lady would be +pleased to know a man like you.”</p> + +<p>“Ah! you see it?” cried the German. “But Heinrich +is so cunning. Now if I had your help―”</p> + +<p>“What would you have us do?” asked Hal.</p> + +<p>The big German was silent for some minutes before replying.</p> + +<p>“If I had your help,” he said at length, “I would +see that you all regained your liberty. Will you help me?”</p> + +<p>“What is it you would have us do?” asked Chester.</p> + +<p>“I will not say until you have promised,” said von +Bernstrum.</p> + +<p>“And we will not promise till you have told us,” said +Hal. “How do we know that you are a man of your word, or that you +are a fighter, such as you would have us believe.”</p> + +<p>“What! Freiderich von Bernstrum not a fighter!” +exclaimed the big German in surprise.</p> + +<p>“We have only your word for it,” said Hal quietly.</p> + +<p>Von Bernstrum paced up and down excitedly. He stopped suddenly.</p> + +<p>“Let me bring swords!” he exclaimed, “and you +shall see whether I can fight!”</p> + +<p>He made as if to leave the room.</p> + +<p>“Not so fast!” exclaimed Hal. “The clash of steel +would bring the whole fortress down on us. But I shall try you +out.”</p> + +<p>“How?” exclaimed the German eagerly.</p> + +<p>“Alexis!” called Hal.</p> + +<p>The big Cossack approached.</p> + +<p>“Here,” said Hal to the German, pointing to Alexis, +“is a foeman worthy of your steel. You shall try with +him.”</p> + +<p>“Good!” exclaimed von Bernstrum. “With +fists?”</p> + +<p>“No,” replied Hal, who was somewhat doubtful of +Alexis’ prowess in the fistic art. “How about a wrestling +match?”</p> + +<p>“Good!” exclaimed von Bernstrum again. “But I +assure you I am his superior.” He turned to Alexis. “Get +ready, man!”</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_8'></a>CHAPTER VIII.<br /><span +class='fss'>THE ESCAPE.</span></h2> + +<p>Alexis made ready.</p> + +<p>Hal realized that he was taking a desperate chance to put through +the scheme that had entered his mind. Not only was von Bernstrum a +bigger man than Alexis, but the latter had lost much blood only 36 +hours before. Doubtless also he knew every trick of a wrestler or +fighter.</p> + +<p>Alexis took off his shoes and threw them into a corner, and divested +himself of his coat. Von Bernstrum growled like a dog as he followed +the Cossack’s example.</p> + +<p>Alexis held out his hand. Von Bernstrum gripped it hard and gave a +grunt of satisfaction.</p> + +<p>“A man’s hand,” he exclaimed.</p> + +<p>Alexis placed his right hand across the German’s shoulders and +caught him firmly and the boys saw by the expression on his face that +he was not certain of the outcome. The German had not boasted in vain. +He was indeed a giant.</p> + +<p>“If ever men felt the joy of battle, these two do,” +exclaimed Hal to Chester.</p> + +<p>The two men were now gripped in a tight embrace. Von Bernstrum felt +Alexis over carefully, but gave him no opening.</p> + +<p>“A man’s chest,” he grunted.</p> + +<p>Alexis so far had uttered no word. Now he perceived that his +opponent was preparing for the loin throw and prepared himself to meet +it. When he had foiled this attack, he held his opponent for a moment +at a disadvantage.</p> + +<p>Alexis gripped von Bernstrum for a hug. Had the German been a weaker +man, his ribs must have cracked; but he had caught deep breath, and the +Cossack might as well have tried to crush a tree.</p> + +<p>“A good try!” muttered the German.</p> + +<p>He now tested Alexis sorely. He tried a cross hitch, but failed. At +this, a smile broke out on Alexis’ face.</p> + +<p>Both lads, who had been watching the struggle nervously, now grew +confident. It was evident that the Cossack hoped for victory.</p> + +<p>At last Alexis saw his chance. In getting the grip he wanted, it was +necessary for him to face the danger of putting himself in his +opponent’s power; but the Cossack ventured to do this, for he +realized that by no other means could he throw him. Von Bernstrum saw +his opponent’s move and took advantage of it, and for a moment +Alexis was afraid it was all over with him.</p> + +<p>But he still held his ground. Von Bernstrum’s grip grew weaker +at last, and the boys could hear him panting like a dog. Hal spoke to +Chester.</p> + +<p>“I believe he realizes that Alexis will master him,” he +exclaimed in a whisper.</p> + +<p>Chester nodded in assent.</p> + +<p>Now Alexis put all the strength of his mighty shoulders, back and +loins into a mighty heave, and Freiderich von Bernstrum, giant though +he was, went flying across the room, his head striking the floor with a +terrible thud.</p> + +<p>For a moment the lads were afraid Alexis had killed him; but for a +moment only. Calmly Alexis put on his shoes and donned his coat. Then +he turned to his young friends and waited. His attitude said as plain +as words:</p> + +<p>“I have done the fighting. You do the rest.”</p> + +<p>Quickly Hal stooped over the fallen man and took a bunch of keys +from his pocket. Then, straightening up, he approached the door, opened +it and peered out. There was no one in sight.</p> + +<p>Hal turned to Alexis.</p> + +<p>“Change clothes with him,” he whispered, motioning to +the fallen German.</p> + +<p>Hastily Alexis obeyed. In spite of the fact that von Bernstrum was +almost two inches taller than Alexis, the height of the latter was so +great that Hal believed the difference would not be noticed.</p> + +<p>The lad now relieved von Bernstrum of his revolvers. Alexis had +donned his adversary’s sword with his uniform. Then once more Hal +approached the door and peered out. Then he spoke to Alexis.</p> + +<p>“We will go with you as though we were your prisoners,” +he explained. “If anyone accosts us, we may have to fight. +However, I believe you look enough like von Bernstrum to avoid +detection. Pull the hat well over your face, and if anyone asks where +you are going, reply that you are taking the prisoners to the +commandant. Do you understand?”</p> + +<p>Alexis signified that he did, and quietly the three, still followed +by Marquis, left the room. Along the same passageways they had +traversed Hal guided Alexis by a touch of the hand, for the lad’s +sense of direction was much better than that of the giant Cossack.</p> + +<p>At last they came into the open and started toward the gate. So far +they had not been accosted. At the gate a soldier approached Alexis and +saluted.</p> + +<p>“Are you going out, sir?” he demanded.</p> + +<p>“Yes,” replied the Cossack, mimicking von +Bernstrum’s voice as best he could. “These prisoners have +given me their parole, and I am taking them out for a breath of air. +Get me two more horses.”</p> + +<p>The soldier saluted and turned away. Hal addressed Alexis.</p> + +<p>“You are doing beautifully,” he exclaimed. “I +didn’t know you were such a strategist.”</p> + +<p>“Why,” exclaimed Alexis, “next to being a fighter +I am a strategist. I remember one time―”</p> + +<p>“Save it for some other time,” said Hal.</p> + +<p>“If you don’t believe―” began the big +Cossack, somewhat crestfallen.</p> + +<p>“Never mind now,” broke in Chester. “We have other +things to do.”</p> + +<p>Alexis subsided, grumbling. A few moments later the soldier +reappeared leading three horses. Alexis took all three bridles, and +bade the soldier begone, which order the latter obeyed in a hurry.</p> + +<p>Quickly the three friends leaped into the saddle, and started off at +a rapid trot, riding eastward. Out of sight of the town, they bore off +slightly to the North, for, as Hal said, they did not wish to run right +into the German army advancing on Lodz.</p> + +<p>They had proceeded perhaps a mile out of sight of the castle, when +Hal suddenly checked his mount, and raised a warning hand. All stopped +to listen. From the direction in which they had just come, came the +frenzied tolling of a great bell, followed by a few faint shots.</p> + +<p>“They have learned of our escape,” said Hal quietly. +“That, I imagine, is a warning to the countryside to be on the +lookout for us.”</p> + +<p>All three put spurs to their horses, and set off again at a gallop. +For two hours they kept up this swift pace, and then Alexis drew +rein.</p> + +<p>“Unless I want this horse to drop under me,” he said, +“we shall have to slow down. There is no horse living that can +carry me at that gait very long.”</p> + +<p>The boys did not doubt this, and they continued their journey at a +more leisurely pace. Finally, rounding a turn in the road, they came +upon a little stream, perhaps a hundred yards wide. There was no +bridge.</p> + +<p>“Guess we shall have to make our horses swim it,” said +Chester.</p> + +<p>Accordingly all plunged into the stream, Marquis swimming behind, +and soon reached the opposite shore. Here they drew up in a clump of +bushes and sat down to dry off a bit.</p> + +<p>“Do you suppose they know which way we came?” asked Hal +of Chester.</p> + +<p>“I don’t know. However, I suppose they will search in +all directions, and they are bound to come upon us sooner or later if +we linger around here.”</p> + +<p>“You are right. I guess we had better move.”</p> + +<p>Soon the little party was in the saddle again, and making off at a +rapid trot. Hal, for some unaccountable reason turning suddenly in his +saddle, uttered an ejaculation.</p> + +<p>“What’s the matter?” demanded Chester.</p> + +<p>“Look!” said Hal, pointing back toward the little +stream.</p> + +<p>Alexis and Chester followed the direction of Hal’s finger. +Just plunging into the stream were half a dozen horsemen, and it was +plain from that distance that they were German soldiers, and that they +had made out the forms of the fugitives.</p> + +<p>The three friends put spurs to their horses and, with Marquis loping +along behind, soon lost themselves in a little woods. Here they urged +their tired horses on, and at last came to a small open space. This +they crossed before Alexis’ horse gave out and went to the ground +in a heap.</p> + +<p>“I am afraid it’s all off,” exclaimed Hal. +“How far do you suppose we are from the German border, +Alexis?”</p> + +<p>“Not far,” answered the Cossack. “Besides, some of +our troops have been operating in these parts. They were only small +detachments, and most of them have been driven off; but even now there +may be some of them near.”</p> + +<p>Alexis urged the two lads to ride on and leave him, but this they +refused to do. Therefore they dismounted and, turning their horses +loose, they continued their journey on foot.</p> + +<p>As they walked along a man suddenly popped out from among the trees, +brought his revolver to bear upon the trio, and in a loud tone +cried:</p> + +<p>“Halt!”</p> + +<p>Alexis gave one quick glance at the man’s uniform, uttered a +cry of pleasure and spoke a few quick words in his native tongue. The +lads were surprised to see the man drop his rifle, throw his arms about +Alexis and embrace him.</p> + +<p>For some moments after quitting this embrace the two talked in +Russian, the lads being able to pick up only a few words. Then Alexis +turned to the two lads.</p> + +<p>“My brother,” he said simply. “He belongs to a +detachment of Cossacks who raided in these parts two weeks ago. The +detachment was surrounded by Germans, he tells me, and practically +annihilated. About 150 men escaped to the woods, where they have been +conducting a guerilla warfare, picking off the Germans one at a time, +wherever they happen to find one alone, or in pairs, or small parties. +These Cossacks are scattered all through the woods, and to get them +together would be almost impossible.”</p> + +<p>“Then how are they able to tell friend from foe?”</p> + +<p>“You see that large green leaf my brother wears in his +hat?”</p> + +<p>“Yes.”</p> + +<p>“That is their emblem.”</p> + +<p>Alexis’ brother approached and spoke in German.</p> + +<p>“Come,” he said. “I shall show you +something.”</p> + +<p>He led the way into the woods, and approached a large tree, where he +pointed to a placard tacked on it. The placard read:</p> + +<p>“All Russians at large in these woods are ordered to assemble +at this spot the 10th of this month without arms and surrender, under +penalty of death.”</p> + +<p>“That was posted two weeks ago,” said Alexis’ +brother, “and this is the 20th. Read our answer below +it.”</p> + +<p>The answer read:</p> + +<p>“Come and take us!”</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_9'></a>CHAPTER IX.<br /><span +class='fss'>GUERILLA WARFARE.</span></h2> + +<p>“Do you mean?” asked Hal, “that 150 men, at large +in these woods, have defied the whole German army?”</p> + +<p>“There are less than a hundred now,” replied the brother +of Alexis, whose name the lads learned was Stephan. “We have been +conducting this guerilla warfare for more than two weeks now, and we +have done inestimable harm to the Germans. We have evaded large bodies +of troops sent out to kill or capture us. Of course, some of our men +have been picked off, but we are not going to run yet.”</p> + +<p>“But how do you live?” demanded Chester.</p> + +<p>“We have been living on roots and herbs,” was the reply, +“and such other food as we have been able to take from the +enemy.”</p> + +<p>“And where do you sleep?”</p> + +<p>“This forest,” said Stephan, “makes an ideal +hiding place. It is filled with large caves, the presence of which +seems to be unknown to the foe. Many of the caves are large enough for +twenty men, although it is seldom that there are more than five or six +men in one at a time.”</p> + +<p>From the rear came the sound of galloping horses. Stephan sprang to +instant action.</p> + +<p>“Come with me,” he cried, and led the way into the very +thick of the forest.</p> + +<p>Hal, Chester, Alexis and Marquis followed him and soon were safe +from discovery in a large cave, the mouth of which was screened from +view by a dense mass of shrubbery.</p> + +<p>Outside, after a few minutes, the lads could hear the sounds of +moving horses and the exclamations of their riders. The horsemen halted +near the entrance to the cave and held a consultation.</p> + +<p>“They have probably fallen in with some of these +guerillas,” said one voice. “If so, we shall have hard work +to find them.”</p> + +<p>Close upon his words came a scream from outside, and straining their +ears, the party inside made out the sound of a distant pistol shot.</p> + +<p>“One more gone,” said Stephan briefly.</p> + +<p>There came a volley from outside the cave, as the Germans fired at +their unseen assailant.</p> + +<p>“Not much chance of their hitting anybody,” said Stephan +calmly.</p> + +<p>From outside the cave came the sound of rapidly retreating +hoofbeats. The Germans were moving away. Alexis, having thus quickly +learned the way of the guerillas, cautiously poked his head from the +cave, reached back and picked up his brother’s rifle, and fired +after the retreating foe.</p> + +<p>“Another one,” he said grimly, returning the weapon to +Stephan.</p> + +<p>“Just how long do you suppose you can keep this work +up?” Chester asked of Stephan.</p> + +<p>“Not much longer, I am afraid,” was the reply. “I +figure it is only a question of days now until the Germans send out a +force strong enough to search the woods thoroughly. In that event, we +shall try to make our way back over the border to safety.”</p> + +<p>From a corner of the cave Stephan now produced a small quantity of +food, which he set out. All fell to and it was soon disposed of. Then +they ventured from the cave and, walking slowly, made their way +northward.</p> + +<p>“It’s just a case of keep moving,” Stephan +explained. “Of course, it might be possible for us to join +forces, but then we should greatly lessen our effectiveness.”</p> + +<p>Alexis, who was in front, stopped suddenly and threw up a warning +hand. Immediately the other three halted in their tracks. Peering in +the direction in which Alexis pointed, they made out the forms of half +a dozen German soldiers standing near a tree. Directly, however, the +latter made off, and the little party approached the tree.</p> + +<p>“Another placard, eh?” muttered Stephan, as he drew +near.</p> + +<p>The other three also approached and read:</p> + +<p>“The time for surrender has been extended till to-morrow at +noon!”</p> + +<p>Angrily, Stephan snatched the placard from the tree. Turning, he saw +several other trees also bearing placards. These he also tore down.</p> + +<p>“Surrender, eh!” he cried. “Never!”</p> + +<p>Suddenly he clapped his hand to his side and staggered back. At the +same instant, from directly ahead, came the sharp crack of a rifle. But +Stephan did not fall. Recovering himself, he dashed straight in the +direction of the shot at top speed. There came the second crack of a +rifle, but still the Cossack did not pause.</p> + +<p>Now Hal, and Chester, dashing after him with Alexis at their side, +saw Stephan pause momentarily, raise his rifle and fire quickly twice. +Then he dropped to the ground. But it was not from injury, as the +others feared, for at that moment there came a volley and bullets +whistled overhead. Quickly Hal, Chester and Alexis also flung +themselves to the earth.</p> + +<p>Stephan, lying upon his stomach, was pumping lead steadily straight +before him. Hal, Chester and Alexis drew their revolvers and joined in +the fray. Through the trees they could now make out the number of their +assailants. There were an even dozen of them, all lying in a little +clearing, their rifles trained upon the spot where the four friends +lay.</p> + +<p>Under the deadly aim of Stephan’s rifle, two men dropped to +the ground. The others returned the Cossack’s fire, but the +latter was well protected by foliage, and escaped injury. Another +German jumped to his feet, spun round on his heel, and fell to the +ground.</p> + +<p>Then, at a word from one of the Germans, the remaining nine jumped +suddenly to their feet and dashed toward their enemies on a dead run, +their rifles spitting fire as they came on. Exposed to the fire of the +foe as they were, they realized that their only chance of life lay in +rushing their opponents.</p> + +<p>Alexis was the first to see the danger in this attack. He jumped to +his feet, dragging Hal and Chester with him. Stephan also was up in an +instant.</p> + +<p>“Quick!” cried Alexis, and at a rapid run, he urged the +lads to another secluded spot.</p> + +<p>There, as the Germans appeared in the spot where they had stood a +few moments before, Stephan, the only one of the four armed with a +rifle, fired three more quick shots at the foe. One tumbled forward on +his face, and a second dropped his rifle.</p> + +<p>And now unexpected aid came to the four friends. From the rear of +the Germans came several rifle shots in quick succession, and two more +of the enemy bit the dust. As they turned to face this new attack, +Stephan stepped forward and opened on them again. Caught thus between +two fires, the Germans fought well, firing blindly at their unseen foes +on both sides.</p> + +<p>But such a struggle could have but one ending. The Cossacks, +screened from the fire of the enemy who lay between them, were +practically safe from the German fire, at the same time having the +Germans at their mercy. No quarter was asked, nor none was given. Soon +a heap of fallen bodies marked the spot where the Germans had made +their last stand.</p> + +<p>From the other side of the Germans, two Cossacks now stepped forth, +and approached. Stephan advanced to meet them. Alexis made his way to +the fallen foe, and gathered up the rifles. Returning, he passed one to +each lad, with the remark:</p> + +<p>“Here; these beat revolvers for this kind of +warfare.”</p> + +<p>After a short conference with the two newcomers, Stephan motioned +for his friends to follow, and the party, now increased to six, moved +on. For perhaps half an hour they marched through the woods, and at the +end of that time stopped once more before the entrance to a second +cave.</p> + +<p>“Before we enter,” said Stephan, “I will tell you +that these men have just informed me that inside a consultation of war +is being held. There are perhaps 60 men there, who have gathered here +for that purpose. I have vouched for you, and you will therefore be +admitted to the consultation without question.”</p> + +<p>The others signified that they understood, and Stephan led the way +into the cave. Inside, the lads looked quickly around. This cave, they +saw, was much greater than the first they had entered. Also it showed +signs of human handiwork. Large pillars ran up through the center of +it, and beyond the far entrance the lads could see one, then two more +compartments.</p> + +<p>Sitting about on the floor of the first compartment were more than +half a hundred men, talking in low tones. They looked up in surprise at +the sight of Hal and Chester, but Alexis they greeted with a nod. The +latter stepped forward and greeted them in their native tongue. The +lads could not make out all he said, but the looks of suspicion on the +faces of some vanished immediately, and they moved a bit to let the +newcomers join the circle.</p> + +<p>Plainly it was the opinion of most of the men that the guerilla +warfare had been carried far enough. Some were in favor of making a +last desperate raid upon the enemy before attempting to get back across +the Russian border, while others were in favor of attempting to get +back immediately.</p> + +<p>For an hour the discussion waged and then it was rudely interrupted. +The man left to guard the entrance to the cavern rushed in.</p> + +<p>“Germans approaching in great force!” he cried.</p> + +<p>Immediately all were on their feet, and one man rushed to the narrow +entrance. He started through but fell back, a bullet in his head. A +second, rifle in hand, also advanced, but Hal, springing quickly to his +feet, stopped him.</p> + +<p>“Wait!” he cried. “They can pick us off one at a +time as we go out. Some other plan will have to be found.”</p> + +<p>Stephan and Alexis took their stand by the lad’s side, and +faced the men who would have rushed to certain death.</p> + +<p>“The lad is right,” said Stephan. “Out the other +end of the cave, men, and scatter!”</p> + +<p>Rapidly this order was obeyed, and soon none were left in the first +compartment but Hal, Chester, Alexis, Stephan and Marquis.</p> + +<p>Now Hal also dashed after the others. But the lad was not bent upon +flight, leaving his friends to face the enemy alone. Quickly he hurried +through the three compartments of the cavern, casting a keen eye here +and there. Clear to the far entrance he went, and then turned back. As +he made his way along, he stumbled over something and fell heavily. He +was up in a moment, however, and glanced curiously at the object over +which he had tripped. Then a smile lighted up his face. He made his way +back to his friends.</p> + +<p>“How many do you suppose there are out there?” asked +Alexis.</p> + +<p>“We have no means of telling,” replied Chester. +“However, there are probably no less than two or three +hundred.”</p> + +<p>“If we stand here and fire as they attempt to enter, we may +have some success,” said Stephan.</p> + +<p>“Yes,” said Alexis, “but the detonations may +occasion the falling in of the cavern. At the first shot from outside a +piece of falling rock grazed my shoulder.”</p> + +<p>“We must do something quickly,” said Hal. “We +cannot leave without striking at least one blow at them.”</p> + +<p>“Assuredly not,” agreed Alexis. “I have a +plan.”</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_10'></a>CHAPTER X.<br /><span +class='fss'>THE MIGHT OF ALEXIS.</span></h2> + +<p>“What is it?” demanded all eagerly.</p> + +<p>“We will retreat to the second compartment,” said the +giant, “and I will place myself behind the pillar, which I can +see from here.” He stooped and picked up a long heavy iron bar +from the ground. “I will have this for my weapon, and invisible +in the darkness, if they come in a rush, I can let my bar fall upon +their skulls thirty times a minute.”</p> + +<p>“Good!” cried Hal, “and at the same time I have +another plan. The rest of us shall retreat to the third compartment, +leaving Alexis, for the moment, to deal with the foe alone. But Alexis, +when I say retreat, you must leave your post and come to the third +compartment. Is it agreed?”</p> + +<p>“Agreed!” cried the giant.</p> + +<p>“All right, then. To your post!”</p> + +<p>Quickly the four retreated to the second compartment, where Alexis +took up his post behind the large pillar, concealed from view by the +narrowness of the entrance between the compartments themselves. The +others retreated to the third compartment.</p> + +<p>For a long time, it seemed to Alexis, he waited in silence. Then the +head of a man appeared through the entrance to his compartment and came +toward him. There were more heads behind him.</p> + +<p>“Strike, Alexis!” came Hal’s voice from the next +compartment.</p> + +<p>The giant obeyed. The iron bar rose and fell full upon the head of +the first man, who dropped without a cry. Ten times in almost as many +seconds the huge iron bar rose and fell again and not once did it fail +to find its mark.</p> + +<p>The German soldiers could see nothing; they heard sighs and groans; +they stumbled over dead bodies, but as they did not realize the cause +of all this, they still came forward. So far there had not been a sound +to tell those behind what was transpiring in front.</p> + +<p>But now an officer, bearing a torch, approached. On arriving at the +entrance to the compartment where Alexis had exterminated all that had +come, he drew back in terror; but his retreat was blocked by those +pressing on from behind. The officer saw the heap of dead, but as yet +he had not discerned the cause.</p> + +<p>Suddenly a gigantic hand issued from nowhere and clutched him by the +throat. A second later the captain fell close to the now extinguished +torch, adding another body to the heap of dead. All this was effected +as mysteriously as if by magic. Another officer, unable to account for +the pile of dead, cried to the men behind him:</p> + +<p>“Fire!”</p> + +<p>A volley rang out, and for a moment the cavern was lighted as if by +day. But none was hit. From behind him Alexis now heard the sound of +Hal’s voice.</p> + +<p>“Come back quickly!” whispered the lad.</p> + +<p>The giant obeyed instantly, and glided softly through the door to +the third compartment. Hal took him by the arm and led him to the side +of the room, where he showed him the object over which he had stumbled +when in the compartment a few moments before. It was a barrel of +powder.</p> + +<p>“Alexis,” said Hal, “you will take this barrel, +the fuse of which I am going to light, and hurl it at our enemy. Can +you do it?”</p> + +<p>Alexis stooped over the barrel, weighing fully seventy pounds. He +lifted it easily with one hand.</p> + +<p>“Light it,” he said briefly.</p> + +<p>“Throw it right in among them,” explained Hal.</p> + +<p>“Light it,” repeated Alexis.</p> + +<p>Hal did so, and the giant, picking up the barrel, advanced to the +door of the compartment. Beyond he could hear the confused shouts of +many men, as they in vain sought to explain the death of their +companions.</p> + +<p>Alexis blew on the fuse, that it might burn quicker.</p> + +<p>And now, by the light of the sparkling fuse, the enemy made out his +form. They saw the barrel he held in his hand; they understood what was +going to happen.</p> + +<p>A cry of terror arose. Some attempted to fly; officers cried out to +Alexis that they would spare him if he would extinguish the fuse. +Others commanded their men to fire; but the latter were too terrified +to do so.</p> + +<p>Now the arm of the giant swung round. There passed through the air +the train of fire, like a falling star. The barrel fell into the midst +of the terrified German soldiers. Immediately Alexis dashed for the far +end of the cavern, just outside which his friends now stood.</p> + +<p>Then, from inside the second compartment came the terrible thunder +of the explosion, blowing the cavern to pieces, hurling men to death by +the force of its shock, falling stones crushing out the life of many +more.</p> + +<p>Alexis dashed for the open air, where his friends stood awaiting +him, a happy smile on his face at the success of his exploit. Three +more paces and he would be free of the cavern–two more. And right +at the exit, a heavy piece of rock, sent hurling in the air by the +explosion, fell upon him–striking him upon the +shoulder–bearing him to the ground–pinioning him beneath +it.</p> + +<p>And at the same instant the walls of the cavern began to give. +Chester, realizing what was happening, sprang into the mouth of the +cave, closely followed by Hal and Stephan. Now, under the massive rock, +Alexis stirred. In spite of the great weight upon him, he turned slowly +under it, until it rested squarely upon his back. Then stretching his +hands out before him, he rose to his knees balancing the rock upon his +back. Then he straightened up, and the rock tumbled from him with a +terrible crash. He turned, and with his friends, dashed from the +cave.</p> + +<p>They had not escaped a second too soon.</p> + +<p>There was a terrible rending sound, the crunching of rock against +rock, and slowly the walls of the cavern gave; then fell inward with a +fearful crash.</p> + +<p>Some distance from the cavern the four stopped running. Hal wiped +the moisture from his brow.</p> + +<p>“A close call and no mistake,” he said weakly.</p> + +<p>Chester grasped Alexis by the hand.</p> + +<p>“I thought you were done for,” he exclaimed.</p> + +<p>Alexis grinned.</p> + +<p>“Can’t kill me that way,” he said. +“What’s a little rock like that? It was play for me to lift +it.”</p> + +<p>“Maybe so,” replied Chester, “but even now, I can +scarcely believe what I saw.”</p> + +<p>“Why,” said Alexis, “I could have lifted that rock +with one hand. It was child’s play. Now I can still remember one +great feat I accomplished. It was in St. Petersburg–Petrograd +now, by the grace of God and the Czar. There is a little stream runs +through the city. Over this there is a bridge. I was passing along one +day, when I saw that the bridge, having been weakened in the middle, +was about to fall. Well, there was no one on it, so that would have +been all right. But, dashing down the street was an ambulance. The +woman in it was very ill. It was absolutely necessary that she be taken +across the bridge at once. At the bridge the driver was held up. The +guard would not allow the ambulance to cross. It was too dangerous. But +delay meant death for the lady. I leaped into a small boat and was +quickly under the middle of the bridge. The bridge was low, and by +standing I could just touch it. I put my two hands under the bridge and +braced it while the ambulance crossed. I was sorely tested, but I held +out. I account that one of my greatest feats.”</p> + +<p>“And so you should,” said Hal dryly.</p> + +<p>“But,” demanded Stephan, who was greatly interested in +his brother’s wonderful narrative, “how is it, that with +all that weight resting upon you, and you standing in a boat, the boat +didn’t sink? I can’t understand how, with that weight upon +it, it remained afloat.”</p> + +<p>“Why,” said Alexis with perfect gravity, “I forgot +to mention that the stream was very shallow–in fact it could be +waded. The boat was forced down by the great weight until it rested on +the bottom. In that way, it was perfectly simple.”</p> + +<p>“I see,” exclaimed Stephan. “A wonderful feat, +truly!”</p> + +<p>“Was the bridge made out of rubber?” asked Chester, +laughing to himself.</p> + +<p>“Rubber?” repeated Alexis. “No; it was a wooden +bridge.”</p> + +<p>“Then,” said Chester, “how do you account for the +fact that it stretched so when the boat went to the bottom of the +stream?”</p> + +<p>“I didn’t say it stretched,” said Alexis.</p> + +<p>“I know you didn’t say so,” grinned Chester; +“but it must have stretched unless it broke in two.”</p> + +<p>Alexis looked aggrieved.</p> + +<p>“If you don’t believe me―” he began.</p> + +<p>“I wouldn’t dispute you for the world,” said +Chester. “I just wondered.”</p> + +<p>Alexis would have replied, but at that instant his hat was lifted +from his head, and all four became aware of the distant sound of a +shot. Quickly all dropped to the ground, but they were not quick enough +to go unscathed. A bullet struck Stephan in the arm, and he dropped it +to his side with a cry.</p> + +<p>Instantly Alexis was all anxiety. He jumped to his brother’s +side.</p> + +<p>“Are you much hurt, Stephan?” he asked tenderly, taking +the injured arm in his hand.</p> + +<p>“Just a scratch,” replied Stephan. “I’ll be +all right.”</p> + +<p>Nevertheless Alexis would not rest until he had bound up the wound +with his handkerchief. In the meantime, from their positions on the +ground, the others had been popping away at the enemy. Several rounds +of shots were exchanged but none of the four friends was hit again. The +enemy was so far away that the lads could not tell whether or not their +fire was effective.</p> + +<p>Bullets began to drop closely about them, in their exposed position. +Also they fell oftener now, indicating that the force opposed to them +was numerically superior.</p> + +<p>“Great Scott!” exclaimed Hal, as his hat seemed to leap +suddenly from his head. “We’ll have to get away from here. +This is too close for comfort.”</p> + +<p>“You bet,” said Chester. “Now when I say the word +we’ll all jump to our feet and make a dash for those trees in the +distance.”</p> + +<p>At the word, the four sprang to their feet, and not even waiting to +take a parting shot at the enemy, dashed away as fast as their feet +would carry them. Hal took the lead, and behind him came Stephan, then +Alexis and then Chester.</p> + +<p>When Hal reached the trees, uninjured, he turned to speak to +Chester. What was his amazement and dismay to find that Chester was not +there. At that moment Alexis and Stephan dashed into the shelter. Hal +glanced back over the distance they had come.</p> + +<p>There lay Chester, in the open field. He had been struck down by a +German bullet, and even now the enemy, with a triumphant cry, was +charging down upon him. With a cry, Hal leaped forward, but the iron +hand of Alexis stayed him.</p> + +<p>“You stay here,” said the giant. “I’ll get +him!”</p> + +<p>Discarding his rifle, he dashed forward in the very face of the +onrushing foe. Chester’s life hung in the balance!</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_11'></a>CHAPTER XI.<br /><span +class='fss'>TWO TO THE RESCUE.</span></h2> + +<p>As friend and foe alike bore down on him, Hal saw Chester raise +himself. He got to his knees, struggled to his feet, staggered, and +then fell back again.</p> + +<p>The Germans rushing toward the lad numbered twenty–Hal counted +them. They were approaching the prostrate form of the lad as rapidly as +they could, afoot. But Alexis was nearer, and it was evident that he +would reach the lad first.</p> + +<p>The giant Cossack covered the intervening space with long bounds, +going at a speed of which Hal had not deemed him capable.</p> + +<p>And now, as he came close to Chester, a second form bounded after +him. There was a flash of a hairy body as Marquis leaped forward and +set out after Alexis. He came up with the latter before he reached +Chester, and they came to the lad’s body together.</p> + +<p>In the meantime, Hal and Stephan kept up a steady fire with their +rifles, pouring a hail of bullets in the direction of the advancing +Germans. One man fell, but the others dashed on.</p> + +<p>At this point Hal made a startling discovery. The magazine of his +weapon was empty and he had not another cartridge. At the same moment +Stephan fired his last remaining shot. Hal sprang forward and seized +the weapon Alexis had thrown down when he dashed to Chester’s +aid. It was empty. The lad uttered a cry of dismay, and turned his +eyes. The two still had their revolvers, but the distance was too great +for a pistol bullet.</p> + +<p>Alexis, having reached Chester’s side, knelt and raised the +lad’s head to his knee. Hurriedly he drew his canteen and poured +a little water down his throat. Chester looked up into the +Cossack’s face and smiled feebly. Alexis tried to place him upon +his feet, but the lad was too weak to stand.</p> + +<p>A fierce growl from Marquis, who had been standing guard over the +two, with bared fangs and bristling back, called Alexis to more serious +work. The Germans, apparently fearing nothing at the hands of one man, +a wounded boy and a dog, had come within fifty feet without firing a +shot at the trio. Now, as they approached closer, the leader of the +band called out: “You are my prisoners!”</p> + +<p>Without waiting to reply, Alexis leaped toward them. His sword +flashed from his scabbard and whirled aloft even as he jumped. He was +among the enemy before they realized what had happened.</p> + +<p>The suddenness of the giant’s spring stood him in good stead. +Before a rifle or a revolver could be brought to bear on the huge form, +Alexis had come to such close quarters with his foes as to prevent the +use of firearms. The German leader did draw his revolver, but the mêlée +was so fierce and men were tangled up so that he was unable to fire for +fear of hitting one of his own men.</p> + +<p>To the right, to the left, and straight ahead darted the fiery sword +of the giant Cossack. The Germans gave back before the very savageness +of this attack, but Alexis kept close in among them, for while he was +fighting mad, he was still cool enough to realize that his hope of life +lay in his keeping in the center of the enemy.</p> + +<p>Before the thrust of the angry sword three men fell. The blades of +the others who encircled him hissed above his head, flashed by his +side, but his single weapon so far had formed a perfect barrier. Not a +thrust or a slash had passed it. Ten swords clashed against the +giant’s blade at once. With a quick move, he swept them all +aside, and with a quick thrust disposed of another of the enemy.</p> + +<p>With a rapid spring forward he avoided the weapons that would have +been buried in his back by his foes in the rear, and sweeping his sword +around his head with such rapidity that he seemed a circle of fire, for +a moment he cleared a space around him.</p> + +<p>But in that instant the German officer brought his revolver to bear +and fired.</p> + +<p>Alexis had perceived this move out of the tail of his eye and, +leaping straight forward into the midst of the foe once more, escaped +the bullet.</p> + +<p>Whirling his sword about his head, the Cossack spun on his heel. The +guard of the German soldiers was not strong enough to ward off this +terrible blow. Two swords went spinning in the air, and Alexis’ +weapon, sweeping through one of the enemy, also cut down another. But +again the Cossack had left an opening for the officer’s pistol, +and the latter was not slow to take advantage of it.</p> + +<p>Slowly he raised his weapon and took careful aim. He had determined +not to miss this time. His finger tightened on the trigger, +and―</p> + +<p>Aid came from an unexpected source.</p> + +<p>Marquis, who, up to this instant, had remained alert over Chester, +had not taken a hand in the battle. His eyes fastened at this moment on +the German officer, his canine intelligence told him as clearly as +words that his giant friend stood at death’s door. With one +fierce growl, he sprang from Chester’s side, and leaped upon the +German officer from behind, even as the latter pressed the trigger. The +officer’s aim had been deflected, and the bullet passed over +Alexis’ head.</p> + +<p>The German turned upon this new assailant with an imprecation. His +hand went to his holster in an attempt to draw his second revolver. But +Marquis was prepared for this move. His teeth met in the +officer’s hand and the latter yelled with pain.</p> + +<p>Marquis released his hold and sprang straight at his enemy’s +throat. The latter was thrown from his feet by the force of this +attack, and in falling his head came in contact with the sharp barrel +of his revolver, knocking him unconscious.</p> + +<p>Marquis, now having entered the battle, had no thought of leaving +Alexis to fight it out alone. Once in the fight, he was there to stay. +He sprang forward and leaped upon a German soldier who at that moment +would have plunged his sword into Alexis’ defenseless back. The +man gave a choking cry as the teeth of the dog found lodgment in the +back of his neck and he was borne to the ground.</p> + +<p>And still the giant Cossack, with herculean strength and +unbelievable prowess, was fighting his assailants. A sword had pierced +him through the left hand, another had scratched his cheek and a third +had struck him in the right shoulder. But still, unmindful of these +wounds, he fought on with the same determination and courage as +before.</p> + +<p>Marquis, having dragged the man off his back, Alexis plunged into +the midst of his enemies anew. Two more were pierced through and +through by the quick and mighty thrusts of the powerful arm. Another +dropped with a bleeding head, as Alexis caught him squarely with a +quick back-handed blow just in time to avoid the point of the +other’s weapon.</p> + +<p>Now there were but eight Germans left, and these leaped quickly +backward, thinking to put enough distance between them to allow them to +draw the revolvers. But Alexis gave them no time for this. Springing +after them as they turned to flee, he cut two more down with mighty +strokes. Then the others scattered. The Cossack sprang after one and +disposed of him before he could draw his pistol, but the others now had +had time to get their guns.</p> + +<p>A bullet struck Alexis in the right shoulder, but he did not even +stagger. He rushed quickly upon one of his enemies, who stood with a +revolver pointed squarely at him, his finger on the trigger. There was +a sharp report, followed instantly by another and the German fell to +the ground with a bullet in his head. Alexis sprang out of the cloud of +smoke unharmed.</p> + +<p>This time the Cossack had been saved from death by the hand of +Chester. The lad having recovered sufficiently to take in the scene +about him, had staggered to his feet, thinking to go to the aid of his +companion. But he was so weak he could not stand. Then, seeing the +revolver dropped by the German officer, he had crawled toward it. At +last he reached it, and he had just time to aim and fire before the man +who had drawn a bead on Alexis could pull the trigger.</p> + +<p>There remained but four Germans on their feet, and these, having +witnessed the mighty prowess of the giant Cossack, turned to flee. But +Alexis was after them in a flash. His blood was up, and though bleeding +in a dozen different places, he had no mind to quit the battle until +the last of his enemies had been laid low.</p> + +<p>But the fleeing Germans, unfortunately for them, had turned their +faces in the wrong direction. Hal and Stephan, who had been struck +spellbound by the terrible fighting of their friend and brother, saw +the four men coming toward them, weapons in hand, with Alexis in hot +pursuit. Quickly they aimed and fired. At this distance a miss was +impossible. Two Germans staggered in their stride, reeled, and dropped +over backward.</p> + +<p>The others halted, appalled by the forgotten presence of this new +enemy. The stop was unfortunate for them. Alexis bore down on them like +an avenger, and close on his heels came Marquis. The Germans hesitated, +then started to run. It was too late.</p> + +<p>Alexis’ mighty sword cut down one before he had taken a dozen +steps. The other, bewildered, and not knowing which way to turn, threw +down his weapons and raised his hands in token of surrender.</p> + +<p>Alexis, however, did not perceive this move. The light of battle +still flashed in his eyes, and he could see nothing but glittering +swords and shining revolver muzzles. His upraised sword would have +split the head of the German, had not Hal, stepping forward quickly, +caught the blow upon his own weapon.</p> + +<p>“Alexis!” he cried sharply.</p> + +<p>The giant paused and looked around as one in a dream. Then he slowly +raised his sword, gazed at the lad blankly for a few seconds, spun +twice around and fell forward on his face. He had swooned.</p> + +<p>Stephan leaped forward, and from his canteen poured water over the +face of his brother. Knowing that the giant was in good hands, Hal +dashed forward to where Chester still lay, having fallen back after +firing the one shot. The prisoner, now unguarded, took to his heels and +was soon out of range.</p> + +<p>“Are you badly hurt, Chester?” asked Hal, anxiously, +bending over his friend.</p> + +<p>“I feel pretty weak,” was Chester’s reply. +“But I don’t believe I am seriously hurt. A bullet must +have grazed my temple, and the force of the shock put me out. But say! +Isn’t Alexis a terrible fighter?”</p> + +<p>“I should say he is,” answered Hal. “I don’t +believe anyone ever saw such fighting before. Certainly not since the +days of Hereward.”</p> + +<p>Hal assisted Chester to his feet and, supporting him by an +encircling arm, led the way to where even now Alexis, having received +first aid treatment at the hands of his brother, was sitting up and +gazing about somewhat vacantly.</p> + +<p>Chester spoke to the big Cossack.</p> + +<p>“I owe my life to you,” he said simply. “I shall +never forget it.”</p> + +<p>“That’s all right,” replied Alexis. “I +remember now. It was quite a fight, wasn’t it? But I remember +once when I was attacked by―”</p> + +<p>His voice died away, and he sank to the ground again.</p> + +<p>His friends bent over him anxiously, and Hal placed a hand over his +heart. It was beating regularly while his deep and regular breathing +proclaimed his condition.</p> + +<p>“He is sleeping,” said Hal quietly.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_12'></a>CHAPTER XII.<br /><span +class='fss'>ON THE VISTULA.</span></h2> + +<p>“How far are we from the Vistula now, Alexis?” asked +Chester, as the little party rode rapidly forward.</p> + +<p>“Not more than seven or eight versts, I am sure,” was +the reply.</p> + +<p>“Is it likely the Germans have advanced that far in this +section?”</p> + +<p>“There is no telling; we shall have to be careful.”</p> + +<p>All day long the four friends had been hurrying toward the Russian +lines. Alexis, after his terrible struggle with overwhelming odds, when +he had dashed forward to save Chester, had slept for hours without +moving-all night, practically. When he awoke, shortly before dawn, he +announced that he was in condition to move on.</p> + +<p>Chester’s wound also had benefited by the rest and now +bothered him little. While Alexis and Chester slept, Hal and Stephan +had succeeded in capturing four horses; and so, long before sunrise, +the little party continued their flight, Marquis, as usual, trailing +along behind.</p> + +<p>For another hour now the four rode on, and then a welcome sight +confronted them. Hal was the first to perceive water ahead, and called +the attention of the others to it.</p> + +<p>“The Vistula,” said Alexis briefly.</p> + +<p>There was not the sign of either friend or foe. For some +unaccountable reason neither bank of the stream was guarded. Hal +supplied an explanation.</p> + +<p>“The Germans have probably been pushed back further to the +South,” he suggested, “thereby doing away with the +necessity of a patrol here.”</p> + +<p>They drew nearer the river. At this point the stream was very deep, +and there was no bridge; but as the four drew up on the bank, Chester +made out a cloud of smoke coming up the stream.</p> + +<p>“A steamer!” he exclaimed.</p> + +<p>The lad was right. The smoke drew nearer, and at last the friends +were able to discern the outline of a small river vessel steaming +toward them. They jumped from their horses, and advanced to the very +edge of the water, where they awaited the approaching boat.</p> + +<p>“She may be a German,” said Hal.</p> + +<p>“It is hardly likely,” said Alexis.</p> + +<p>“But I understood the Germans had fitted out several river +steamers,” said Hal.</p> + +<p>“True,” replied Alexis; “I had forgotten. We shall +have to be careful.”</p> + +<p>But now the vessel was close enough for those on shore to make out +her flag. The emblem flying aloft was that of the Czar. Hal drew off +his coat and waved it about his head.</p> + +<p>“If they will stop and pick us up,” he explained, +“it may save us a tedious ride.”</p> + +<p>A sharp blast of the whistle signified that Hal’s signal had +been seen. The steamer came to a stop in midstream, a launch put off +toward the shore, and soon grounded at the spot where the four friends +stood.</p> + +<p>Quickly they leaped into the little craft and were soon aboard the +steamer, where they were greeted by the commander of the vessel. Hal +explained their situation as briefly as possible.</p> + +<p>“Well,” said the commander, “I can’t promise +to put you ashore immediately, for I am bound further up the river in +pursuit of a German steamer that has been bombarding several upstream +towns. When I have disposed of the enemy, however, I shall be glad to +land you down the stream, for I shall return immediately I have sunk +the foe.”</p> + +<p>With this the fugitives had to be content. They were assigned +quarters on the steamer, and after washing the dirt and grime from +their hands and faces, they returned on deck, where they made +themselves comfortable as the steamer continued on her way. They passed +several little towns without stopping.</p> + +<p>Suddenly those on deck were brought to their feet by the booming of +a single heavy gun. All strained their ears to listen. The first report +was followed by the sound of others. The commander of the vessel sprang +to action.</p> + +<p>“Full speed ahead!” he cried.</p> + +<p>The steamer leaped forward faster than before. The crew prepared for +action. The guns were made ready and the crews stood to their posts. +The commander, from his position, motioned the four friends toward +him.</p> + +<p>“We have run the enemy down,” he informed them. +“Can I count upon your services if they are needed?”</p> + +<p>“You may,” replied Hal and Chester briefly.</p> + +<p>Alexis and Stephan nodded their heads in assent.</p> + +<p>“Good!” said the commander. “You will stay here +near me, then. I shall not hesitate to call upon you.”</p> + +<p>Rounding a slight bend in the river, the Russian steamer came in +full sight of the enemy. So silently had she approached, that the +Germans, engaged in hurling shells upon a little village, did not +perceive their presence until a shell from the Russian plowed up the +water under the prow of their boat.</p> + +<p>As soon as the Germans became aware of the presence of another enemy +they turned to meet it. Their forward guns were quickly trained upon +the Russian steamer and burst into action. The first salvo was +harmless, for the range had not been gauged accurately.</p> + +<p>The Russians were more fortunate with their second fire. A shell +burst squarely upon the deck of the German with a loud explosion. There +was a shower of steel and wood, followed by a cry of triumph from the +crew of the Russian vessel. A second shell carried away the +enemy’s single smokestack and a third burst in the muzzle of one +of the foe’s forward guns, blowing it to atoms.</p> + +<p>At full speed the Russian advanced, and when within two hundred +yards swung her broadside to the enemy and poured in a rain of shells. +The Germans fought back gamely, but with the first success of the +Russians they seemed to have lost their heads and fired wildly. Their +aim was poor, and the Russians suffered little.</p> + +<p>Having delivered his broadside, the Russian brought his forward guns +to bear and with these he raked the deck of the enemy–fore and +aft–with shot and shell.</p> + +<p>All this time the vessels had been drawing closer together. Now the +German commander, apparently realizing that he was fighting a losing +battle, steamed full speed for the Russian ship. By a hasty maneuver +the Russian commander avoided being run down, but a second later the +vessels crashed broadside to broadside.</p> + +<p>The German vessel stood somewhat higher in the water than did the +Russian craft, and before any aboard the latter realized what was +happening, the foe swarmed down the side onto the Russian vessel. So +sudden and unexpected was their onslaught, that for the moment the +Russians on deck gave way before them; and had it not been for the +presence of mind of Hal and Chester, it is likely the German rush would +have been successful.</p> + +<p>The two lads sprang forward into the very faces of the enemy, their +automatics spitting fire as they leaped. Alexis and Stephan came close +behind them. The very fury of their attack caused the Germans to halt +momentarily, and this gave the Russian sailors time to rally and spring +to their aid.</p> + +<p>Their automatics having been emptied, the lads leaped into the thick +of their foe, striking out with their naked fists. Hal twisted a sword +from the hand of a German officer, and laid about him lustily. Chester, +stooping, came to his feet with a sword in his hand, and joined his +friend in the press. Alexis also possessed himself of a weapon and +rushed forward.</p> + +<p>By this time the Russian sailors had met the foe and the conflict +became general. Slowly the Germans gave way, retreating to the side of +the ship. Then, suddenly, they turned and leaped for their own vessel, +which still lay close, under the guiding hand of the German commander. +The Russians plunged after them, following them to the deck of the +German ship.</p> + +<p>Brought to bay, the Germans turned in a last desperate stand. +Releasing the helm, the German commander himself sprang into the midst +of the struggle. His sword flashed aloft, and two Russian sailors hit +the deck, pierced through and through. He was a big man, this German +commander, and a powerful one. As he pressed fiercely forward, for a +moment the first line of Russians gave way; but at that moment he ran +against a solid obstruction in the form of Alexis.</p> + +<p>They fell to, hand to hand, and on all sides of them the others gave +way. Thrusting and parrying, the two skipped forward and back, each +losing ground and then recovering it. Alexis, by a quick sidestep, +avoided a fierce thrust, and stepped forward to put an end to the +encounter. In his haste he slipped, and slid to the deck.</p> + +<p>With a fierce, guttural cry of satisfaction, the German stepped +forward, raised his sword and would have plunged it into his +opponent’s breast; but Alexis was too quick for him. With his +bare hand he seized the naked blade aimed at him and clung to it. In +vain did the German try to draw his sword through the Cossack’s +hand. Alexis’ mighty grip held it easily.</p> + +<p>Now, putting forth greater exertion, by the aid of the weapon to +which he clung, Alexis dragged himself to his feet. In vain did the +German commander wrench at the sword. He could not free it. He at +length gave up the idea, dropped the sword and leaped back.</p> + +<p>As Alexis, now firm upon his feet once more, took a step forward, +the German commander turned and ran toward a rack of rifles. Alexis did +not take time to reverse the weapon he still held by the point. Raising +it high above his head, he carefully gauged the distance, and let fly. +The sword went hurtling through the air, turning once in its flight. +Alexis’ aim was true, and the point of the weapon pierced the +German commander squarely between the shoulder blades. He threw up his +hands and fell forward on his face.</p> + +<p>Alexis turned and surveyed the battle.</p> + +<p>The Germans had been pressed back by the Russians, led by Hal and +Chester, until now they were fighting desperately on the stern of the +vessel. Alexis dashed forward to take part in this fray; but the +Germans, having witnessed the death of their commander, had lost heart. +Perceiving the giant form rushing down upon them, they threw down their +arms as one man. Some turned quickly and leaped overboard into the +river and struck out for the shore, while others stood quietly waiting +to be bound by their captors. The battle was over.</p> + +<p>Immediately the commander of the Russian steamer ordered his men and +the prisoners back aboard his own ship. Then he turned to Hal and +Chester.</p> + +<p>“As you have taken such a prominent part in this +victory,” he said, “I will allow you to finish the work by +blowing up the enemy. You will attach a fuse to the magazine and then +hurry back here, that we may reach safety before the +explosion.”</p> + +<p>The two lads saluted, and made their way to the magazine of the +German vessel. Here they quickly attached a fuse, and lighted it. Then +they hurried aboard the Russian steamer, which immediately got under +way. One hundred yards, two hundred yards, three hundred, they steamed +from the doomed vessel; then there came the sound of a muffled +explosion, the German craft burst into a sheet of flame, broke into two +pieces, and settled slowly beneath the waters of the Vistula.</p> + +<p>“A good job done,” said the Russian commander +briefly.</p> + +<p>He turned once more to the two lads. “I want to say,” he +added, “that it has never been my fortune to meet two braver +lads. You are English, I take it?”</p> + +<p>“Americans,” replied Hal briefly.</p> + +<p>“So? Still, I might have known it. I have known several +Americans, and they were always cool and brave. Where do you wish to go +now?”</p> + +<p>“Well,” said Hal, “we would like to get back to +Lodz. I suppose our regiment is still stationed there.”</p> + +<p>“I will see that you get there with all possible +dispatch,” the commander promised. “I will land you where +it will be most convenient for you.”</p> + +<p>The lads thanked him, and walked across the deck, where they +rejoined Alexis and Stephan.</p> + +<p>“You would make a pretty good sailor, Alexis,” Chester +told him.</p> + +<p>The Cossack drew himself up and strutted proudly for several +moments.</p> + +<p>“Of course I would,” he said. “It is nothing new +to me.”</p> + +<p>“Nothing new!” exclaimed Hal in some surprise.</p> + +<p>“No,” replied Alexis.</p> + +<p>“You mean you have been a sailor?” demanded Chester.</p> + +<p>“Certainly. Of course the commander of this vessel did a fair +piece of work a few moments ago; but I could tell him a few things. +Why, when I commanded a ship in the battle of―”</p> + +<p>“Enough! Enough!” cried Hal, throwing up his hands in +protest.</p> + +<p>“Do you doubt my word?” demanded Alexis fiercely.</p> + +<p>“Not at all,” Hal hastened to assure him. “But, +Alexis; have you learned yet what ‘drawing the long bow’ +means?”</p> + +<p>“No,” replied the giant, “are you going to tell me +at last?”</p> + +<p>“I had about decided to,” said Hal slowly; “but +after this, never!”</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_13'></a>CHAPTER XIII.<br /><span +class='fss'>INTO THE CARPATHIANS.</span></h2> + +<p>“So,” said the Grand Duke Nicholas, “you find that +there are adventures to be found in the eastern as well as the western +theater of war, eh?”</p> + +<p>“Yes, Your Excellency,” replied Hal.</p> + +<p>“And tell me,” continued the Grand Duke, “what do +you think of the Cossacks as fighters?”</p> + +<p>“From what we have seen,” replied Chester, “I +should say that there are none better.”</p> + +<p>“Good!” was the emphatic rejoinder. “There are +none better!” and he regarded the lads silently for some +moments.</p> + +<p>Hal, Chester, Alexis, Stephan and Marquis, after the battle on the +Vistula, had returned to Lodz without difficulty. The commander of the +Russian river steamer had made it as easy for them as possible. In Lodz +they learned that their regiment had been ordered to the front, and had +been on their way to join it, when the Grand Duke, inspecting his +troops, had come upon them. He immediately had the two lads taken to +his quarters, for he was greatly interested in them. Alexis, Stephan +and Marquis waited without.</p> + +<p>At last the Grand Duke spoke. “I have a mission for you, if +you are willing to undertake it,” he said.</p> + +<p>“Yes, Your Excellency,” replied Chester.</p> + +<p>“Very good! As you may know, my primary aim, from the +beginning of the war, was an invasion of Hungary–the capture +first of Budapest and next of Vienna. This necessitates the capture of +Cracow, in Galicia, and the forcing of a passage through the Carpathian +mountains–a tremendous feat at this time of year. The investment +of Cracow is certain. Even now my troops are within a few miles of that +stronghold, and I had word this morning that part of it is in flames. +Do you follow me?”</p> + +<p>“Perfectly, Your Excellency,” replied both lads.</p> + +<p>“Very well! Now, in some unaccountable manner, my plans have +always been anticipated by the Austrians. How or by whom I do not know; +but I believe it has been by some of Brunnoi’s bandits, who have +a stronghold in the Carpathians, but mingle freely with our soldiers. +Do you know who Brunnoi is?”</p> + +<p>“No, sir,” from both the lads.</p> + +<p>“Well, Brunnoi is a veritable bandit chief–a man of +great cunning and influence, besides being a born gentleman. A +Hungarian, and therefore a Slav, he should naturally support the +Russian cause. He has a strong following and his men would make +first-rate soldiers. We are seeking his support, and so are the +Austrians. However, if it is through his spies that my plans are being +given to the Austrians I would like to know it. Do I make myself +clear?”</p> + +<p>“You mean,” said Hal, “that you would have us find +out just where he stands?”</p> + +<p>“Exactly! He has sent me word that he will espouse our cause, +but I fear he may be double-dealing. Naturally, therefore, you will +keep your identities secret. That is all.”</p> + +<p>The lads saluted, and turned to depart, but before they could leave +the tent a man in civilian garb entered the tent. The Grand Duke +greeted him warmly and then called to the lads.</p> + +<p>“I wish to introduce you to Count de Reslau,” he said. +“He, if any man, can give you information that may be of aid to +you.”</p> + +<p>The two lads acknowledged the introduction, and as he recognized the +newcomer, Hal started back. The latter smiled.</p> + +<p>“I see you remember me,” he said pleasantly. “I +must apologize for my previous rudeness. I did not then know you were +friends of the Grand Duke.”</p> + +<p>Both lads bowed. Count de Reslau was the man who had laughed at +Alexis in a store in Lodz some time before–the man whom the lads +believed to be responsible for their being set upon in the street. The +count explained the matter to the Grand Duke.</p> + +<p>“Well,” said the latter, “I am sure these lads +bear no malice.” To the boys he added: “The count is one of +my best friends. Being a Hungarian he has not taken up arms against +Hungary, although he is in sympathy with us. I am sure he can aid +you.”</p> + +<p>He then gave the count an idea of the mission the lads were about to +undertake, and the count promised to help them in every way +possible.</p> + +<p>“Your Excellency,” said Hal, as they prepared to take +leave of the Grand Duke, “have we your permission to take Alexis +with us?”</p> + +<p>“And who is Alexis?” demanded the Grand Duke.</p> + +<p>Chester explained.</p> + +<p>“Take him by all means,” was the Grand Duke’s +reply; “and return to me at the earliest possible +moment.”</p> + +<p>The lads saluted and left the tent. Alexis joined them on the +outside and the boys told him of the work ahead of them.</p> + +<p>“But how about me?” Stephan demanded. “Am I not to +go too?”</p> + +<p>“No; I am sorry,” replied Hal. “The Grand Duke +said nothing about you. Besides, three are better than four.”</p> + +<p>Stephan was greatly disappointed, and showed it plainly. However, he +was not a man to complain. He wished them good luck, shook hands all +around and set off to rejoin his own regiment.</p> + +<p>Suddenly Hal bethought himself of Marquis.</p> + +<p>“We can’t take him,” he said. “He would be +in the way. What shall we do with him?”</p> + +<p>Alexis bethought himself of a friend in the city who, he was sure, +would be glad to look out for the dog while they were away. Accordingly +Marquis was taken to this home, where the woman of the house readily +agreed to take care of him; but when they came to leave, Marquis wanted +to go, too.</p> + +<p>“No,” said Hal, and he talked to the dog quietly for +several minutes, explaining to him the necessity of his remaining +behind.</p> + +<p>There could be no doubt that the dog understood, for a sorrowful +look came over his face. His tail wagged in understanding of his +orders, but there was a hurt look in his eyes. However, he did not +protest, and when his three friends finally walked away, he stood +looking after them regretfully, although making no attempt to +follow.</p> + +<p>“The first thing,” said Hal, “is to procure three +good horses.”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” agreed Alexis, “and another to carry +food.”</p> + +<p>“No,” answered Hal. “We cannot be bothered with +that. We shall have to live off the country.”</p> + +<p>Alexis made no objection, though it was plain to both lads that the +Cossack would have rather made due preparations to care for the inner +man. Three strong, wiry Cossack horses having been placed at their +command, the three leaped into the saddles and set off through the +streets of Lodz at a slow trot.</p> + +<p>Darkness was falling when they came to the outskirts of the city, +and turned their heads toward the southwest. As far as Cracow the roads +were held by Russian troops in force, and the three travelers +experienced no difficulties. They did not go close to the beleaguered +city, but bore off a bit to the north, just skirting the great Russian +army before the Galician stronghold.</p> + +<p>Three days and nights they traveled without incident. Their food +they purchased at little towns through which they passed, or at +farmhouses; and they slept wherever they happened to be when night +overtook them. But now that they were drawing close to the Carpathians, +Hal decided that the order of things must be reversed.</p> + +<p>“In the future we shall travel at night,” he said. +“We’ll do our sleeping in the daytime.”</p> + +<p>This plan was approved by both Chester and Alexis, so that the +morning of the fourth day found them approaching the long line of +mountains.</p> + +<p>The Carpathian mountains encircle Hungary on three sides, separating +it from Germany on the northwest, from Galicia on the northeast and +from Turkey on the southeast. At the southern extremity of the range, a +branch proceeds in a southerly direction across the Danube to the +center of European Turkey, connecting the Carpathian mountains with the +great eastern branch of the Alps.</p> + +<p>It can readily be seen, therefore, that the Carpathians are much +like the Alps–made up of rugged peaks between which are narrow +passes. These passes furnish the only means of getting across the +mountains.</p> + +<p>In their search for Brunnoi, the boys and Alexis were now +approaching that part of the mountains which separates Hungary from +Galicia, and through which there are but three passes; so that their +traveling had to be done slowly and with great care.</p> + +<p>“Now, if you will permit me, I shall take the lead,” +said Alexis. “I have been in these parts before. Besides I have +been told of certain landmarks in these foothills which indicate where +Brunnoi holds forth–not definitely enough to lead us straight to +him; but I have a general idea of the direction.”</p> + +<p>No objection being offered, Alexis swung into the lead and the +horses plunged up a narrow pass into the midst of the wild hills, +probably the wildest and most desolate spot in all Europe. Great trees +and massive rocks overhung the little pass, making progress extremely +difficult. At the top of the first steep incline, the riders allowed +their horses to stop and rest. Then they fared on again.</p> + +<p>It was nearing daylight when they came upon a small hut, shrouded by +trees, through which a dim light twinkled.</p> + +<p>“We’ll wait here until daylight,” said Hal, +“and when the occupants of the hut come out we will accost +them.”</p> + +<p>They waited. Daylight came, and with its coming, a man came from the +hut. Hal approached him, and addressed him in German. The man looked at +him shrewdly, and then answered in the same tongue.</p> + +<p>“Yes,” he said, “we can spare you something to +eat; also your friends. May I ask what you are doing in the +mountains?”</p> + +<p>“We are trying to make our way to Budapest,” replied +Hal. “We were captured by the Russians, and escaped. We are not +familiar with the ground, however, and have met with +difficulties.”</p> + +<p>“Well,” said the man of the hut, “I can set you +right. Come.”</p> + +<p>Over the meal they talked of the war. Finally Chester said:</p> + +<p>“Is there any truth in the report that Brunnoi will go over to +the Russians?”</p> + +<p>“None!” cried the man, striking the table a hard blow +with his fist. “I know, because I am one of his men.”</p> + +<p>“What!” exclaimed Hal, in well simulated surprise, +though he had surmised as much.</p> + +<p>“Yes,” said the man quietly. “Brigands, they have +called us. But they will find that when the Russians attempt to cross +the Carpathians, as they surely will, we bandits will give as good an +account of ourselves as will the trained troops. We love our country +just as well as do those who live in Budapest. But tell me, you are not +Hungarians nor Austrians, nor even Germans?”</p> + +<p>“No,” said Hal, thankful that they had been wise enough +to discard their uniforms before setting out upon their mission. +“We are Americans.”</p> + +<p>“Ah!” said the man. “I have heard much of them. +And you have been fighting with the German army?”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” said Chester truthfully.</p> + +<p>“But this man,” said their host, turning to Alexis. +“Is he an American also?”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” replied Hal, and signified for Alexis not to +speak, for fear that his accent might betray him.</p> + +<p>Their host was evidently satisfied. The meal finished, the man +walked with them to the door, and pointed out the direction they were +to take. Then he pointed also to the southwest.</p> + +<p>“In that direction,” he said, “lies the home of +Brunnoi. No, there is no truth that he will espouse the Russian cause. +Even now he is able to do much harm to their cause. He is with Austria +to the last drop of blood in him.”</p> + +<p>The three took their departure, going in the direction the man had +pointed out. But once out of sight, Hal changed the course, and they +bore off to the southwest for several hours, looking for a place to +secrete themselves for the day.</p> + +<p>“We shall have to be very careful,” said Chester.</p> + +<p>The truth of this statement was proved a moment later. From behind +came the sharp crack of a rifle. Chester’s hat leaped from his +head.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_14'></a>CHAPTER XIV.<br /><span +class='fss'>THE BANDIT CHIEF.</span></h2> + +<p>Hal, Chester and Alexis threw themselves to the ground with a single +movement. A second bullet sped harmlessly overhead.</p> + +<p>“We didn’t come here to fight,” Hal whispered to +his friends, “so here goes.”</p> + +<p>He drew a handkerchief from his pocket, and waved it aloft. This was +answered by a command in German, from some distance away.</p> + +<p>“Stand up; put your hands above your heads and +advance.”</p> + +<p>The three friends did as commanded. Three swarthy-faced men, with +leveled revolvers, advanced to meet them. Quickly they searched their +prisoners, relieved them of their weapons, and bound their hands +securely.</p> + +<p>“Forward march,” commanded one, poking the muzzle of his +weapon into the small of Chester’s back.</p> + +<p>There was no help for it. The three friends obeyed.</p> + +<p>“Where are you taking us?” demanded Hal of one of their +captors.</p> + +<p>“To Brunnoi!” came the brief response.</p> + +<p>“Great Scott!” said Hal to Chester, in English. +“We certainly couldn’t have got there quicker any other +way. You don’t suppose he has learned of our mission.”</p> + +<p>“I don’t see how that is possible,” replied +Chester.</p> + +<p>“Nor I; I suppose the thing to do is to try and convince him +we are German soldiers, or else come straight out and tell him who we +really are and why we are here.”</p> + +<p>“The latter way might be best,” said Chester, +thoughtfully. “For Brunnoi after all may not be such a staunch +Austrian supporter as our late host would have us believe.”</p> + +<p>“True,” said Hal. “I hadn’t thought of +that.”</p> + +<p>After an hour’s ride they came to a little clearing in the +forest that covered this point of the mountain. Here they were ordered +to dismount, and for half a mile proceeded on foot. As they advanced +still further the lads made out the mouth of a huge cavern. Into this +dark hole their captors pushed them. Down the mouth of the cavern they +walked, and then suddenly came to a sharp turn. Ten more paces and they +bumped into a solid wall. One of their captors stepped forward and +passed his hand over the surface of the smooth rock, and it gave way +before him, turning on well-oiled hinges.</p> + +<p>“Great Scott!” muttered Chester. “I have read of +these things, but I never expected to see one.”</p> + +<p>The rock fell into place behind them, and the boys saw that they +stood in a well-lighted compartment, in which stood a table and chairs. +Their guards led them further along, to where they perceived a closed +door. On this one of their captors knocked sharply.</p> + +<p>“Come in,” came a deep voice from beyond the door.</p> + +<p>One of the guards opened the heavy wooden door, and stood back, +signifying for the prisoners to enter.</p> + +<p>The three friends did so. The room was brilliantly lighted. At a +large mahogany desk sat a man in a military uniform, though of what +country or what his rank the boys could not tell, for they had never +seen a similar uniform and the man wore no shoulder straps. The chairs +in the room were beautifully upholstered, and pictures were hung about +the walls. All this the lads saw at a single glance.</p> + +<p>The man at the desk rose and approached them. He bowed slightly, +and, after ordering their hands released, indicated three nearby +chairs.</p> + +<p>“Be seated, if you please,” he said politely, at the +same time motioning the guards to withdraw.</p> + +<p>Hal, Chester and Alexis did as requested. There was now no question +of the man’s identity in the mind of any. He wore a long white +beard and had a pleasant, kindly face.</p> + +<p>Hal rose to his feet.</p> + +<p>“Are you Brunnoi?” he asked.</p> + +<p>Brunnoi bowed.</p> + +<p>“At your service,” he replied. “Now, what can I do +for Lieutenants Payne and Crawford, and their Cossack +friend?”</p> + +<p>The lads started to their feet upon hearing their own names thus +upon the lips of a man they did not believe could possibly know +them.</p> + +<p>“Come, come, gentlemen,” said Brunnoi, smiling at their +surprise. “You see, many things are known to me. For instance, +now, I could even tell you the object of your expedition to these +mountains. Is it necessary?”</p> + +<p>Hal threw wide his arms with a gesture of dismay.</p> + +<p>“I guess it is not necessary,” he said quietly.</p> + +<p>“Good!” cried Brunnoi, for the first time evincing real +interest in the lad. “You are a man after my own heart. You have +nothing to gain by subterfuge.”</p> + +<p>“Well,” said Hal slowly. “You know who we are and +the object of our mission. What is your answer? Are you Austrian or +Russian? Are you a Slav or not?”</p> + +<p>Brunnoi jumped to his feet.</p> + +<p>“Yes,” he replied, “I am a Slav; but I am not one +of your down-trodden Russian Slavs. I am a Hungarian, and a +Hungarian–a true Hungarian–to-day is an +Austrian!”</p> + +<p>“Then,” said Hal calmly, “our mission is +accomplished. We know where you stand. May I ask you a +question?”</p> + +<p>“Certainly.”</p> + +<p>“Is it true that you have been able to furnish the Austrian +general staff with the Grand Duke Nicholas’ plans?”</p> + +<p>Brunnoi was silent for some moments, but at length he replied:</p> + +<p>“I don’t mind answering that question, for you will +never repeat my answer to the Grand Duke. Yes, I have furnished the +Austrian general staff with important information.”</p> + +<p>“Well,” said Chester, breaking into the conversation, +“what are you going to do with us?”</p> + +<p>“Why,” said Brunnoi, “for the present you shall be +kept here as my guests–prisoners, if you prefer. After +that–well, it all depends. Should the Russians come, it may be +necessary to dispose of you. Therefore, you should be wise and pray for +Austrian success.”</p> + +<p>“Surely you do not mean that you would murder us?” asked +Hal.</p> + +<p>“I call it by no such name,” replied Brunnoi calmly. +“Putting away an enemy is not murder.”</p> + +<p>“Very well,” said Chester calmly. “I suppose there +is no use talking about it.”</p> + +<p>“Not the slightest. Come! Follow me, and I shall show you +where you will make your home.”</p> + +<p>The bandit chief arose from his chair and led the way into another +compartment. Hal, Chester and Alexis followed him. This room was also +fitted up comfortably, though not as pretentiously as the +bandit’s office. There were several beds in the room.</p> + +<p>“You may make yourselves comfortable here,” said +Brunnoi. “The door will be always locked, but that need not +interfere with your comfort.”</p> + +<p>He bowed and left the room, and the three prisoners heard the key +turn in the lock behind him.</p> + +<p>“It looks to me as though we are in a bad way this time, all +right,” said Chester, when they were left alone.</p> + +<p>“A bad way is no name for it,” replied Hal; “but +tell me, Chester, did you notice anything familiar about +Brunnoi?”</p> + +<p>Chester clapped his hands together.</p> + +<p>“By Jove!” he exclaimed. “Now that you mention it, +it seems to me I have seen him some place before. But I can’t +place him.”</p> + +<p>“Nor I; but I am positive this is not the first time we have +met. It is his voice that puzzles me.”</p> + +<p>In vain the boys racked their brains. Alexis was called into +consultation. He also had been impressed by Brunnoi’s likeness to +some one he had seen before; but he was unable to throw any light upon +the resemblance.</p> + +<p>“Well,” said Chester at length, “I can’t +place him and that’s all there is about it. Nevertheless, I am +absolutely certain I have met him some place before to-day.”</p> + +<p>The door to their prison was now opened and food was placed upon the +table in the center of the room. All three were nearly famished, and +they fell to with a will.</p> + +<p>“Fattening us up for the slaughter,” said Chester with a +laugh. “However, I guess they won’t kill us +to-day.”</p> + +<p>Slowly the hours passed. There was not a single window or opening in +the room, and the prisoners could not tell whether it was day or night +outside. But now Hal, glancing at his watch, uttered an exclamation of +surprise.</p> + +<p>“Almost midnight,” he said. “Guess we might as +well turn in.”</p> + +<p>Hal and Chester tumbled into the beds, but Alexis continued to sit +in his chair, brooding.</p> + +<p>“Come on, Alexis, get to bed,” Hal called. “What +on earth’s the matter, anyhow?”</p> + +<p>Alexis did not reply, and Hal repeated his question.</p> + +<p>“I was just thinking,” said the giant, “what a +fool I was to let these fellows take my gun away from me without even a +struggle. With a good gun apiece, we might be able to get away from +here.”</p> + +<p>“Cheer up,” said Hal. “We are not going to be +killed. While there is life there is hope. We’ll get out of this +ticklish situation somehow. Just be patient.”</p> + +<p>“Patient!” echoed Alexis; “how can a man be +patient cooped up in a place like this?”</p> + +<p>“Well, it can’t be helped now,” said Chester. +“Come on to bed.”</p> + +<p>But Alexis was in no mood to turn in. For perhaps another half-hour +he sat brooding; then he arose and made a tour of the room. He put his +hand on the doorknob and tried it. It was securely locked, and the +Cossack had no doubt that it was also bolted on the far side. He +rattled the knob angrily, but there was no answer from the outside.</p> + +<p>Alexis continued his tour of inspection. He eyed the table +speculatively. It was made of oak and while not of great bulk was very +heavy–as much as two ordinary men could lift. Alexis picked it up +and tested its weight. Then he growled something to himself.</p> + +<p>He also tested the chairs and even the bed on which he was to sleep, +all the time growling to himself like a dog. Then, his tour of the room +completed, he sat down in his chair again. Hal and Chester had been +watching him from beneath lowered lids.</p> + +<p>Hal raised himself up.</p> + +<p>“Find anything?” he asked.</p> + +<p>Alexis vouchsafed no reply.</p> + +<p>“Great Scott!” cried Chester, sitting up. “Are you +going to mope around all night? Come to bed and get a little rest, that +you may be fit to meet any emergency should it arise.”</p> + +<p>“A good idea,” growled Alexis to himself, and +extinguishing the light, threw himself upon his bed.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_15'></a>CHAPTER XV.<br /><span +class='fss'>GETTING AWAY.</span></h2> + +<p>All were up long before a guard appeared with breakfast. This they +ate leisurely and then sat down to talk their predicament over +calmly.</p> + +<p>“There must be some way of getting out of here,” said +Chester.</p> + +<p>“Yes,” agreed Hal; “and if we are fond of life, I +believe we had better get away soon. But what can we do?”</p> + +<p>“You leave this to me,” growled Alexis. “I have it +all figured out and when the time comes, we will go.”</p> + +<p>“What!” exclaimed Chester. “You have found a way +out?”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” replied the giant briefly.</p> + +<p>“Then―” began Chester, but he was interrupted by +the sound of a key turning in the lock of the door.</p> + +<p>A moment later the smiling face of Brunnoi appeared in the doorway. +He entered the room and closed the door behind him.</p> + +<p>“I have come to tell you,” he said, “that I am +going away for possibly a week. You shall be kept here until I return. +By that time I will have decided just what to do with you. I am taking +most of my men with me, but I have no fear of your getting out of this +room.”</p> + +<p>“We are grateful for your thoughtfulness in letting us know +you are going away,” said Hal sarcastically. “I am sure we +shall miss you.”</p> + +<p>“I am glad of that,” replied Brunnoi. “Your meals +will be brought to you at regular intervals. Till I return +then.”</p> + +<p>He waved his hand airily and stepped quickly through the door, +closing and locking it behind him. Immediately he had left the room +Alexis jumped to his feet. Hal and Chester watched him in surprise.</p> + +<p>The giant Cossack walked over to the bed in which he had slept and +quickly stripped it of its coverings. Then, when nothing but the bare +frame remained he stepped inside of it. Doubling up his huge fist, he +drove it into the footboard with tremendous force. There was a +splintering crash and it fell in twain. Wrapping his hardly-used +knuckles in a cloth he picked up from the floor, he repeated the +operation on the headboard–and the bed lay in four pieces on the +floor.</p> + +<p>Seizing the first portion by one of the heavy legs, he tore at it +with his naked fingers, like a dog at a bone; and soon, exerting his +tremendous strength, he had stripped it clean. The second of the +smaller legs he treated in the same manner, and likewise one of the +larger legs at the head. Then, with these three clubs in his hands, he +approached the two boys.</p> + +<p>“Here is a weapon apiece for you,” he said, extending +one of the smaller legs to the lads.</p> + +<p>Hal and Chester each took the proffered weapons. They were ungainly +and heavy, but the lads realized that they were indeed formidable +weapons. Alexis stood looking at them with the big leg resting lightly +on his right shoulder. It was a massive piece of wood, this third leg, +a terrible weapon in the hands of a giant like Alexis.</p> + +<p>“Now,” said Chester, “we have these weapons, but +how are we going to get out of here?”</p> + +<p>“Don’t let that worry you,” replied the giant. +“As soon as we are certain the bandit king is well on his way, +we’ll get out.”</p> + +<p>An hour they waited–two hours, before Alexis rose slowly to +his feet, indicating that the time for action had come. Slowly he +approached the door and pressed his great weight against it. It did not +budge.</p> + +<p>“Surely you are not expecting to get out that way?” said +Hal.</p> + +<p>Alexis did not deign to reply. Instead he walked over to the table +in the center of the room, and with a single movement swept the dishes +on to the floor. Then, lifting the heavy table, he raised it above his +head, and advanced upon the door.</p> + +<p>Once, twice, thrice the stout oak table crashed against the solid +door. It gave slightly. The giant struck the door a fourth tremendous +blow, and the table burst into a hundred pieces.</p> + +<p>“There,” said Chester, “I didn’t think it +would give.”</p> + +<p>“I was afraid so, too,” said Hal.</p> + +<p>Alexis said nothing. Instead he approached the door, and pressed +against it–testing it. Then he turned, and without exertion, +wheeled a second massive bed into position before the door. This he +braced with the third bed, so that by straining his hardest, he could +not budge them.</p> + +<p>“What are you going to do now?” demanded Hal.</p> + +<p>“You’ll see,” replied the giant briefly.</p> + +<p>He stepped between the door and the first bed, close to it. Here, +bracing himself against the bed, he laid his great hands against the +door and pushed. There was a slight cracking noise. Under this terrible +force, the door was straining. And still the giant kept up the +pressure.</p> + +<p>The muscles in the back of his neck stood out like bands of iron. +The sinews in his bare arms quivered and seemed about to leap from +beneath his skin; and still Alexis struggled with the unyielding door. +There came again the sound of cracking; and the giant released the +pressure. Even from where they stood, the lads could see the door sway +inward into place, thus showing the pressure that had been put against +it.</p> + +<p>The two lads were lost in admiration of the great strength of +Alexis.</p> + +<p>“It doesn’t seem possible,” said Hal, half to +himself.</p> + +<p>“It isn’t possible,” declared Chester.</p> + +<p>But Alexis did not heed these remarks. Hurling the beds away with +fierce kicks, he cleared a space in front of the door. Then he drew +back.</p> + +<p>“Look!” exclaimed Chester in an awed voice.</p> + +<p>Even as he spoke, Alexis drew himself together for a spring. Ten +quick steps he took, and then hurled his giant frame against the heavy +door. There was a thud as he smashed against it, followed by a great +crash of splintering wood, and Alexis, door and all went down in a +tangled heap.</p> + +<p>Quickly the giant extricated himself and darted back into the room, +where he picked up his massive club. Whirling it wildly about his head +he shouted to the lads:</p> + +<p>“Come on!”</p> + +<p>Without a moment’s delay, surprised as they were, the lads +lifted their own weapons, and dashed after the Cossack. Straight out +the door of the bandit chief’s private room the three ran into +the corridor beyond. Sprawling figures sitting idly about gave evidence +that the chief had not taken all of his men with him. At the abrupt +entrance of Alexis these jumped to their feet, drawing knives and +swords.</p> + +<p>Alexis was upon them in a trice, Hal and Chester close behind him. +Rapidly the huge club of the giant rose and fell, once, twice, +thrice–even to five times, and with each crushing blow a man went +down with a crushed skull. The others drew back.</p> + +<p>The two lads now ranged themselves on either side of Alexis, and +together they charged the foe. There was no escape for the bandits, now +backed into a corner; but they fought back with a desperation born of +despair. Three minutes later there was not a man standing on his +feet.</p> + +<p>Alexis rested the end of his club upon the ground, and leaning on +it, wiped the perspiration from his brow. Then, after a brief rest, he +led the way to the entrance to the cavern, barred by the great +rock.</p> + +<p>“Here,” said Chester, “I am afraid, is where we +stop. We do not know how to open it.”</p> + +<p>Alexis pushed the lads aside and examined the rock. Then, without a +word, he dropped his club and put his shoulder to the boulder that +barred the exit. The first attempt made no impression. Taking a deep +breath, the giant tried again. Putting every ounce of his herculean +strength into this final effort, he exerted himself to the utmost.</p> + +<p>Slowly the huge rock began to move. Slowly it began to swing +outward. Then, more rapidly, until, as the catch was released, it swung +away back on its hinges. Alexis, unable to recover his balance, fell +forward on his face. He was up in a moment, however, and the three +darted from the cavern.</p> + +<p>For half a mile they sprinted, seeking to put as great a distance as +possible between themselves and the cavern before pausing for breath. +Then, suddenly, Alexis toppled over on the ground.</p> + +<p>Hal dropped to his knees and gently raised the giant’s +head.</p> + +<p>“Quick, Chester! Some water!” he cried.</p> + +<p>Chester darted away, and soon returned with water in his cap. This +Hal sprinkled over the giant’s face. His efforts were rewarded at +length. The color slowly returned, and Alexis heaved a deep sigh. +Consciousness was returning.</p> + +<p>“Poor fellow,” said Hal softly. “He has worn +himself out.”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” said Chester, “and had we not brought him +along, we would still be prisoners in the cavern, with our death only a +question of days or hours.”</p> + +<p>“True,” said Hal. “And such strength,” he +added, “I never saw before.”</p> + +<p>“Nor do I ever expect to see again,” said Chester.</p> + +<p>Now Alexis stirred and groaned. Then he sat up.</p> + +<p>“What has happened?” he demanded.</p> + +<p>“Through your prowess and bravery,” Hal made answer, +“we have escaped.”</p> + +<p>Alexis jumped to his feet and patted himself on the chest.</p> + +<p>“It is true,” he said, “I am a brave man; and I am +a strong man, am I not?”</p> + +<p>“There can be no question about either,” replied +Hal.</p> + +<p>“Still,” continued the giant, “all things +considered, that was not such a remarkable feat. Now I remember +once―”</p> + +<p>Chester interrupted.</p> + +<p>“Come,” he said, taking Alexis by the arm, “we +must get away from here. The story can wait.”</p> + +<p>Alexis subsided without further words, and the three continued on +their way.</p> + +<p>“The thing to do now,” said Hal, “is to get back +to Lodz as quickly as we can. With luck, we should make it in four +days.”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” agreed Chester, “we have learned what we +set out to learn. There is no use delaying.”</p> + +<p>The attention of all three was at that moment attracted by the sound +of galloping horses, nearby. The hoof beats were coming toward them. +Alexis sprang to action.</p> + +<p>“We must have horses,” he said in a hoarse whisper. +“Otherwise we will be weeks getting back. We will take +these.”</p> + +<p>“How?” demanded both lads in a single voice.</p> + +<p>“Follow me,” commanded the giant.</p> + +<p>Breaking into a quick run he hurried along the road to where it +curved sharply. Here they could not be seen by the approaching riders +until they actually met.</p> + +<p>Alexis took his stand in the center of the road, motioning for the +boys to take positions, one on each side of the road. Then all stood +waiting.</p> + +<p>The hoof beats drew nearer, and then the horses came trotting round +the bend.</p> + +<p>“Only three! Good!” Hal muttered to himself +unconsciously.</p> + +<p>The riders were right upon Alexis before they realized that their +way was blocked. They quickly drew rein and attempted to check their +animals; but it was too late. Alexis had two of the horses by the +bridles, and pushing them back on their haunches by main strength, +succeeded in unseating the riders.</p> + +<p>Hal and Chester pounced upon the two unhorsed men, and had their +weapons before they could make a move to defend themselves. Alexis, +still holding to the two horses, called upon the lads to cover the +third rider, who seemed about to make a dash for liberty.</p> + +<p>Hal was quick to obey.</p> + +<p>“One move,” he said quietly, as he pointed his +newly-acquired revolver squarely at the third man, “and you are a +dead man.”</p> + +<p>The latter raised his hands above his head. While Hal kept him +covered, Chester advanced and relieved him of his weapons. Then he +ordered him to dismount.</p> + +<p>Alexis now approached with the other two horses, one of which he +turned over to Chester. Hal took the third horse.</p> + +<p>“We are sorry to be forced to do this,” said Hal to the +men whose horses they had appropriated, “but necessity knows no +law. We need these animals worse than you do; therefore, we take +them.”</p> + +<p>“We are thankful,” said one of the men, “that you +have spared our lives.”</p> + +<p>Quickly the three friends leaped into their saddles, and spurred +their horses onward.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_16'></a>CHAPTER XVI.<br /><span +class='fss'>ATTACKED.</span></h2> + +<p>For several hours the friends rode along the narrow mountain pass +without incident. They stopped once at a little mountain stream to +quench their thirst and to allow their horses to drink. Then they rode +on again.</p> + +<p>Rounding a sharp turn in the road, they came squarely upon half a +dozen riders, all attired in Austrian uniforms. Hal realized their +peril and acted upon the instant.</p> + +<p>“Quick!” he shouted to his two friends. “Ride them +down!”</p> + +<p>The Austrians were no less surprised than the three friends at this +unexpected encounter; but they also acted quickly. They reined in their +horses and drew their swords and revolvers.</p> + +<p>But before they had time to bring their revolvers to bear, the two +lads and the huge Cossack were upon them, Hal slightly in the lead.</p> + +<p>Hal fired one shot as he swept down upon the foe, but there was no +time for more. The nine horsemen met with a shock, but the Austrians, +being motionless, had the worst of it. The momentum of the horses +ridden by the two lads and the Cossack carried them through.</p> + +<p>“Ride!” shouted Hal, as they burst through the +enemy.</p> + +<p>It was no time for fighting if it could be avoided, and the lads +realized it. All three put spurs to their horses and dashed down the +road, rounding a bend just as the Austrians, having recovered, fired. +None was hit.</p> + +<p>“This is one time where discretion is the better part of +valor,” panted Hal to his friends, who were riding close beside +him. “We’ll run for it.”</p> + +<p>The Austrians quickly turned their horses and dashed on in +pursuit.</p> + +<p>Hal, glancing back, saw that the enemy was not gaining, and reported +this to his friends. Thus encouraged, they urged their mounts even +faster, and before long had drawn out of sight of the pursuers. But at +the very moment they seemed to be safe, Chester’s horse stumbled +and fell, hurling the lad headlong.</p> + +<p>Quickly the others drew up and rushed to his assistance. The lad was +not badly hurt, and was soon able to stand. Then, from the rear, came +the sounds of their pursuers.</p> + +<p>“We can’t stand here,” cried Hal. “Quick, +Chester! Into this clump of trees.”</p> + +<p>Chester did as told and Alexis followed him. Hal, however, seizing +the two horses that were standing led them in between the trees. Then +he sprang to the side of the fallen animal. Grasping him by the head, +he succeeded in getting him to his feet and under cover just before the +Austrians came into sight. A minute later the Austrians swept by.</p> + +<p>Hal breathed a sigh of relief.</p> + +<p>“Pretty close,” he said quietly. “Now let’s +get out of here by the other side.”</p> + +<p>Leading the two horses they started on. Five minutes later there +loomed up through the trees what appeared to be a barn. They advanced +toward it. Not a soul was about, but they proceeded cautiously for they +did not wish to walk into a trap.</p> + +<p>Hal tried the door to the barn. It was locked. Alexis soon remedied +this, however. One quick twitch of his wrist and the lock came off. Hal +went in, and started back with a cry of surprise.</p> + +<p>“What’s the matter?” demanded Chester.</p> + +<p>“Matter?” repeated Hal. “Look!”</p> + +<p>He stepped back and Chester peered over his shoulder.</p> + +<p>“Automobiles!” he said in astonishment</p> + +<p>It was true. Inside the shed were four large touring cars.</p> + +<p>“What on earth can they be doing here, I wonder,” said +Chester.</p> + +<p>“I haven’t the faintest idea,” replied Hal, +“but if we can find any petrol I should say it is a lucky find +for us.”</p> + +<p>He made a rapid inspection of the shed, and stopped at the far end +with a low whistle.</p> + +<p>“What is it now?” demanded Chester.</p> + +<p>“Petrol,” replied Hal. “Gallons and gallons of it. +Now what do you suppose it is here for?”</p> + +<p>“That doesn’t concern us,” said Chester dryly. +“We’ll fill up the tank of one of these cars and get +away.”</p> + +<p>Quickly this was done, and the car was run out the door. Chester +climbed into the rear seat and motioned for Alexis to follow him. +Alexis hesitated.</p> + +<p>“I’ve never been in one of those things,” he said +slowly. “Now, a horse is all right. I know all about a horse. But +I don’t know anything about these things.”</p> + +<p>“Never mind that,” said Chester. “Get in here +quick. Those Austrians are likely to be back any minute and we must +hurry.”</p> + +<p>Alexis climbed in, plainly not without trepidation, and sank back in +one of the comfortable seats. Hal already had taken his place at the +wheel, and slowly the large machine moved forward.</p> + +<p>“I wonder,” said Hal to Chester, “whether we can +go down these passes safely.”</p> + +<p>“Where a machine has gone once, another may go,” said +Chester calmly. “Besides, if you’ll notice, there is a +well-defined track ahead of you, and unless I am much mistaken, it goes +not toward the road but away from it.”</p> + +<p>“By Jove!” replied Hal. “You are right. Now I +wonder how that happens.”</p> + +<p>Gradually the car gathered speed, until it was traveling along at a +good gait. Hal did not wish to go too fast, for he was not familiar +with the roads, and besides, the steep grade also precluded this.</p> + +<p>Night fell. Hal stopped the car long enough to light the +searchlights.</p> + +<p>“They may betray our presence,” he said, “but if I +don’t light them we are likely to go into a ditch.”</p> + +<p>The car crept along slowly during the night hours, and morning found +them still in the mountains. With the coming of dawn, however, Hal put +on more speed, and by noon they were once more on the plains of +Galicia. Then Hal “let her out.”</p> + +<p>Suddenly the machine flashed by a body of troops. Hal swerved to one +side of the road just in time to avoid running into them. Chester +caught a glimpse of their uniforms.</p> + +<p>“Russians!” he called to Hal.</p> + +<p>“Are you sure?” the latter called back.</p> + +<p>“Sure,” replied Chester.</p> + +<p>Hal reduced the speed of the car.</p> + +<p>“In that event I’ll slow down,” he said.</p> + +<p>The car went along now at a more moderate pace; but once again on a +road clear of troops, the speed was increased. They made several stops +along the route, and it was late the following afternoon when they +recognized the familiar minarets of Lodz. Half an hour later the lads +were admitted to the presence of the Grand Duke, Alexis remaining +outside in the automobile.</p> + +<p>Hal made his report to the Grand Duke clearly and concisely.</p> + +<p>“I feared as much,” said the Russian commander-in-chief, +when the lad had finished. “You have done well, however. You will +rejoin your regiment as soon as convenient.”</p> + +<p>At this moment Count de Reslau appeared in the Grand Duke’s +tent. He did not at first notice the presence of the two lads, and +bowed to the Russian commander.</p> + +<p>“Your Excellency―” he began.</p> + +<p>At that moment his eyes rested on Hal and Chester and a look of +surprise and consternation passed over his face.</p> + +<p>“You here?” he cried.</p> + +<p>Hal and Chester bowed.</p> + +<p>“Yes, sir,” said the latter quietly.</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke turned to the count with a smile.</p> + +<p>“And they have successfully performed their mission,” he +said. “But it is even as I have feared. Brunnoi will support +Austria. And what is worse, my plans are being learned by at least one +of his agents and sent to the Austrian general staff.”</p> + +<p>“Impossible!” exclaimed the count, who had now regained +his composure. He turned to the two lads. “Certainly,” he +said, “when I saw you last I did not expect that you would ever +return here. It was a hazardous mission the Duke sent you on. Are you +sure your information is authentic?”</p> + +<p>“Perfectly,” replied Hal calmly. “Brunnoi himself +was our informer.”</p> + +<p>“In that case,” said the count with a shrug of his +shoulders, “you must be right.”</p> + +<p>He turned, and with a few brief words to the Grand Duke, left the +tent. The lads talked for some moments with the Russian +commander-in-chief, and then left the tent, informing him that they +would join their regiment the following day. Outside, they climbed +again into the automobile and Hal drove the car to the house where they +had left Marquis.</p> + +<p>The dog was overjoyed at seeing his friends again. His tail wagged +fiercely and he barked with gladness, insisting upon kissing all three, +in spite of their protests.</p> + +<p>“Down, Marquis!” cried Hal with a laugh. “Do you +want to eat us up. Now what do you say, sir, will you be glad to rejoin +your regiment to-morrow?”</p> + +<p>“Yes! Yes!” barked Marquis.</p> + +<p>“Good!” said Chester. “But we will leave you here +while we get something to eat. Then we will come back and get +you.”</p> + +<p>The three left the house, and made their way to the nearest +restaurant, where they ordered a sumptuous meal. It had been long days +since they had tasted food in plenty, and they ate hungrily. It was +almost dark when they left the restaurant and started after +Marquis.</p> + +<p>As they passed down a side street, five men armed with long knives +sprang out upon them. The three friends were caught off their guard by +the suddenness of the attack, and in spite of the fact that they drew +their swords, for they were again in uniform, their assailants pressed +them sorely. A sword thrust pierced Hal in the arm, and his weapon fell +to the ground. He drew his revolver with his left hand, however, and +fired point-blank at his adversary. His aim was true, and there was one +enemy less.</p> + +<p>At the same moment Chester ran his opponent through, and Alexis +brought another to the ground. The other two turned and fled.</p> + +<p>“I wonder what that was for?” said Chester, brushing +himself off.</p> + +<p>“I can’t imagine why we should have been +attacked,” declared Hal.</p> + +<p>He broke off; for at that moment he espied a figure standing in a +nearby doorway; eyeing them evilly. Hal caught Chester by the arm, and +pointed to the figure.</p> + +<p>“There is the answer,” he said quietly.</p> + +<p>Chester gazed in the direction indicated. Then, with a sudden cry, +both boys dashed toward the doorway.</p> + +<p>For the man they saw, with a sneer curving his lips, wore a long, +flowing, white beard and a military uniform.</p> + +<p>He was Brunnoi, chief of the Hungarian bandits!</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_17'></a>CHAPTER XVII.<br /><span +class='fss'>A STRANGE DISCOVERY.</span></h2> + +<p>Seeing that he was discovered, Brunnoi darted from the doorway and +tried to escape. But he was not quick enough. The lads were upon him in +an instant, and beneath their weight the bandit chief was hurled to the +ground. He struggled fiercely, clawing and scratching like a cat; but +Hal and Chester were too much for him.</p> + +<p>Brunnoi finally ceased his struggles and lay quietly in the +lads’ hands. Hal took him by the collar and jerked him to his +feet; then, each lad taking an arm, they led their prisoner straight to +the Grand Duke’s quarters. They were admitted instantly, and +pushing their captive before them, they approached the Russian +commander-in-chief.</p> + +<p>“Whom have you there?” demanded the Grand Duke, looking +at the prisoner.</p> + +<p>“Brunnoi, sir,” replied Hal calmly.</p> + +<p>“What!” cried the Grand Duke, springing to his feet. +“Is this the bandit chief?”</p> + +<p>“It is, sir,” replied Chester.</p> + +<p>“I am Brunnoi,” said the bandit calmly. “You have +me. What will you do with me?”</p> + +<p>“You shall be shot in the morning!” cried the Grand Duke +angrily.</p> + +<p>Brunnoi smiled.</p> + +<p>“I fear you are mistaken,” he said quietly.</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke grew very angry.</p> + +<p>“You shall be shot at eight o’clock,” he said very +quietly. “You have already caused me much trouble. I can’t +afford to let you escape.”</p> + +<p>He summoned a guard of an officer and ten men, and turned the bandit +chief over to them, with orders that he be shot in the morning at eight +o’clock.</p> + +<p>As Brunnoi was led by the three lads, he smiled at them.</p> + +<p>“I will see you later,” he said calmly.</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke thanked the lads for their important capture, and +then, with Alexis, they made their way to the house where Marquis was +waiting for them. They were given connecting rooms and were soon in +bed.</p> + +<p>Tired out they slept heavily. Therefore, while they had expected to +arise before eight o’clock, nine found them still sleeping. They +were awakened at last, however, by the sounds of a commotion in the +adjoining room.</p> + +<p>The two lads sat up in bed and listened intently. Heavy footsteps +tramped toward their door and it was thrown open with a quick jerk.</p> + +<p>Hal and Chester uttered exclamations of surprise. Confronting them, +in the doorway, was the smiling face of Brunnoi, who was to have been +put to death an hour before. In his hand he held two revolvers, +covering the lads.</p> + +<p>“You see I have kept my word,” he said. “I was not +shot.”</p> + +<p>“How did you escape?” demanded Hal, asking the only +question he could think of at that moment.</p> + +<p>“Never mind that,” replied the bandit. “Get your +clothes on quickly, and come with me.”</p> + +<p>Under the muzzles of the two revolvers, the lads dressed hurriedly. +The presence of Alexis in the adjoining room–the giant lying +completely covered up by bed clothes–passed unnoticed. But +Alexis, beneath his covering, heard what was going on and +understood.</p> + +<p>“Go out ahead of me,” ordered Brunnoi.</p> + +<p>He dropped his two revolvers into side pockets, but kept his fingers +on the trigger of each.</p> + +<p>“One false move and I’ll drop you,” he said +quietly. “Now, march!”</p> + +<p>Slowly the lads left the room, and Brunnoi followed them; but hardly +had they disappeared through the door, when Alexis bounded out of bed +and silently followed.</p> + +<p>At the outside door, Brunnoi stepped back to allow his captives to +pass out first. For an instant he was off his guard. It was +Alexis’ opportunity and he leaped suddenly forward.</p> + +<p>Brunnoi heard the sound of the giant’s footsteps. He turned +quickly, and drew his revolvers, but the Cossack’s leap was too +quick. With a single movement he sent both of the weapons from the +bandit’s hands, and reached out to seize him.</p> + +<p>Brunnoi was as slippery as an eel. He eluded Alexis’ grasp and +darted through the door. Now without weapons, he took to his heels.</p> + +<p>Hal perceived the flying apparition, and reached out a hand to +detain him. He clutched the flowing white beard of the bandit +chief–and the beard came away in his hand. Brunnoi fled down the +steps and made good his escape, Hal being too surprised to move.</p> + +<p>Chester and Alexis were equally as astonished.</p> + +<p>“Well, what do you think of that?” demanded Chester, in +great surprise. “A false beard! But I wonder how he escaped from +the firing squad.”</p> + +<p>“It’s too deep for me,” Hal admitted. “But +we had better report this to the Grand Duke.”</p> + +<p>Together they made their way to the quarters of the +commander-in-chief. The latter listened to their story with +interest.</p> + +<p>“I have just learned of Brunnoi’s escape from the firing +squad,” he said when they had finished their account of their +experience with the bandit chief. “Count de Reslau, being a +Hungarian himself, was greatly interested in this Brunnoi. He asked me +for a pass to see him, I granted this request. The guards saw the count +leave the tent after a few moments’ conversation. But when they +went in to lead Brunnoi forth to execution, he was gone, and another +man was there in his stead. He had exchanged places with +Brunnoi.”</p> + +<p>“Have you perfect confidence in Count de Reslau, Your +Excellency?” asked Hal.</p> + +<p>“Absolute confidence,” replied the Grand Duke. +“Why?”</p> + +<p>“No particular reason,” replied the lad.</p> + +<p>At this moment Count de Reslau himself entered the tent.</p> + +<p>“I hear Brunnoi has escaped,” was his first remark to +the Grand Duke.</p> + +<p>“Unfortunately, that is true,” replied the Russian +commander.</p> + +<p>“Strange,” said the count. “When I talked to him a +couple of hours ago he seemed resigned to his fate.”</p> + +<p>“But,” said the Grand Duke, “he paid these lads a +visit soon after his escape. Following a struggle, he again got +away.”</p> + +<p>The count glanced at the lads incredulously.</p> + +<p>“Has it ever occurred to Your Excellency,” he said +quietly, “that these two lads may know more about Brunnoi than +they care to admit?”</p> + +<p>“What!” exclaimed the Grand Duke.</p> + +<p>Hal took a quick step forward.</p> + +<p>“What do you mean by that?” he asked calmly.</p> + +<p>“You know what I mean,” replied the count with a +sneer.</p> + +<p>He turned again to the Grand Duke. “Has it never occurred to +you, Your Excellency, that these boys may be associated with the +bandit–that they may have been leading you on.”</p> + +<p>“But, but,” stammered the Grand Duke, “their +mission to the Carpathians. Their struggle to get away and their +flight. What of those?”</p> + +<p>“Mere fiction, I should say,” said the count with a +shrug of his shoulders.</p> + +<p>Hal stepped directly in front of the count.</p> + +<p>“That is a lie,” he said quietly.</p> + +<p>The count raised a hand as if to strike him, then thought better of +it and turned away without a word. Plainly the count’s words had +made an impression upon the Grand Duke. He looked at the two lads +closely.</p> + +<p>“What have you to say to that charge?” he demanded.</p> + +<p>“Nothing,” replied Chester, “except that it is too +absurd to be given credence.”</p> + +<p>“Absurd,” sneered the count. “You brought the +bandit here in the first place, realizing that it would give you +standing with the Grand Duke, and knowing all the time that the way had +been paved for his escape. If you had no hand in his escape, how did +you know he had gotten away before coming here?”</p> + +<p>“He came after us,” said Hal, “and would have led +us away had it not been for Alexis.”</p> + +<p>“Absurd,” said the count again and turned to the Grand +Duke. “You see,” he said, “how foolish that is. You +should have concocted a better story,” he added to Hal.</p> + +<p>Now the Count de Reslau was one of the Grand Duke’s closest +friends, and, as the Duke had said, he had implicit confidence in him. +It was only natural, therefore, that he should be impressed with his +reasoning.</p> + +<p>He advanced upon the two lads, and pointed an accusing finger at +each.</p> + +<p>“The count is right!” he exclaimed in a loud voice. +“I can see it all! You are traitors! I would have sworn by your +honor in spite of the short time I have known you. You have rendered +me, I still believe, valuable service; but you have caused me to play +into the hands of the enemy in other matters.”</p> + +<p>“Your Excellency,” said Chester, stepping forward. +“Count de Reslau possibly means well, but he is badly mistaken. +His reasoning is at fault. We are innocent of this charge.”</p> + +<p>“You deny it?” fairly shouted the Duke.</p> + +<p>“Of course they deny it,” said the count. “It is +hardly probable they would admit being traitors and spies.”</p> + +<p>“I understand perfectly,” declared Nicholas as he +stepped to the door of his tent.</p> + +<p>“Orderly,” he called, “summon the corporal and ten +men.”</p> + +<p>He stepped back into the tent and turned upon the two lads +angrily.</p> + +<p>“You shall see how we treat traitors in Russia,” he +said.</p> + +<p>An officer and ten men now strode into the tent. The Grand Duke +waved his hands toward the two lads.</p> + +<p>“Take them out and shoot them immediately.”</p> + +<p>The officer advanced toward the lads.</p> + +<p>“Your Excellency!” exclaimed Hal, stepping forward.</p> + +<p>“Enough!” cried the Grand Duke. “I will be trifled +with no longer. Officer, do your duty!”</p> + +<p>The guards surrounded the boys, and they were marched from the +tent.</p> + +<p>Count de Reslau smiled to himself as they were led away, and turned +to the Grand Duke.</p> + +<p>“Let us go out and watch the proceedings,” he said.</p> + +<p>“Very well,” agreed the Grand Duke, and they hurried +after the firing squad and the prisoners.</p> + +<p>The lads stood facing their would-be executioners when the Grand +Duke and Count de Reslau appeared. At that moment, Hal felt something +in his pocket that gave him a sudden thrill.</p> + +<p>“I am going to take one last chance,” he said to +Chester. To the Duke he called: “Your Excellency, may I make a +last request?”</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke nodded an assent.</p> + +<p>“I would say once more, Your Excellency,” said Hal, +“that we are innocent. But,” he paused, “I can +produce Brunnoi himself!”</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_18'></a>CHAPTER XVIII.<br /><span +class='fss'>THE MYSTERY CLEARED.</span></h2> + +<p>Chester stared in astonishment at his friend. Had he gone mad and +taken this means of staying their execution?</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke staggered back a step, and Count de Reslau smiled +incredulously.</p> + +<p>“Have I your permission to do so, Your Excellency?” +asked Hal.</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke waved his hand.</p> + +<p>“You shall have three minutes to produce him,” he said +angrily.</p> + +<p>“Good!” said Hal. “It will require even +less.”</p> + +<p>His right hand was in his pocket. Suddenly it flashed forth, and +with it something white. Straight toward Count de Reslau the lad +sprang, and before the latter could leap out of the way Hal grasped him +firmly by the back of the neck with his left hand, and with his right +clapped a long, flowing white beard to his face. Then with a twist, he +whirled him so that he faced the Grand Duke.</p> + +<p>“Behold Brunnoi, chief of the bandits!” he cried.</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke staggered back again, and put one hand to his +eyes.</p> + +<p>“Impossible!” he exclaimed.</p> + +<p>But he was forced to believe what his eyes saw. Count de Reslau and +Brunnoi, the bandit chief, were one and the same man. There could be no +doubt of that.</p> + +<p>In vain did the bandit struggle to free himself from Hal’s +firm grasp. The lad clung to him tightly in spite of all his efforts. +Then, realizing that the Grand Duke must be convinced, he dropped the +beard to the ground and stepped back while half a dozen rifles covered +the count.</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke, with a wave of his arm, instructed the officer in +command of the firing squad to release the two lads. Then he ordered +him to conduct the bandit chief to his quarters, and motioned the lads +to follow. Inside the tent the Grand Duke turned upon his false +friend.</p> + +<p>“De Reslau,” he said, addressing the prisoner, “we +have been friends, and for that reason I am offering you a chance to +make a satisfactory explanation–if you can.”</p> + +<p>“I have nothing to say,” replied the prisoner.</p> + +<p>“Will you tell me how you have conducted your +operations?”</p> + +<p>The bandit did not reply and Hal stepped forward.</p> + +<p>“Your Excellency,” he said, “I believe I can +rehearse it from beginning to end. The count probably will correct me +if I am wrong.”</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke ordered him to proceed.</p> + +<p>“Well,” said Hal, “the count knew of our mission. +We went horseback, but the count, being prepared for these rapid +journeys, proceeded by automobile.”</p> + +<p>The bandit chief glanced at the lad in surprise.</p> + +<p>“How did you know that?” he demanded.</p> + +<p>“We stumbled upon your automobile garage in the +mountains,” said Hal quietly. “Of course, when we returned, +the count was waiting for us. Why he left us behind alive when he came +back here, I don’t know, but I now remember how greatly surprised +the count was to see us back safely. Immediately he planned to get us +out of the way. Hence the attack the other night, in which we were +fortunate enough to capture him.”</p> + +<p>“But the escape?” demanded the Grand Duke. “How +did he escape?”</p> + +<p>“Very simple,” replied Hal. “The man to whom you +gave the pass to see the prisoner was of course not Count de Reslau, +but a man made up to resemble him. Am I right, count?”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” replied the bandit. “I have kept him near +me for that very purpose. He had his orders that in the event I was +ever arrested, he would make up to resemble me.”</p> + +<p>“Exactly,” continued Hal. “Once alone with the +prisoner the rest was easy. He removed his disguise, and Brunnoi +removed his. Brunnoi came out as Count de Reslau, and the other man +stayed. Naturally, the first thing the count thought of when he was +free was to dispose of Chester and myself. Hence his call this morning. +As he escaped from Alexis I succeeded in pulling off his beard. +That’s all there is to it.”</p> + +<p>“And now,” demanded the bandit chief, “what are +you going to do with me?”</p> + +<p>“There is but one thing I can do with you,” replied the +Grand Duke. “The fate of Count de Reslau shall be the same as +that already pronounced for Brunnoi, the bandit. You shall be shot +within the hour. Personal friendship shall not keep me from doing my +duty. Officer, see that my command is carried out.”</p> + +<p>The guard closed in about Count de Reslau and he was led away. Then +the Grand Duke Nicholas, commander-in-chief of the Russian armies, sank +into a chair, and buried his face in his arms on the table. Quietly the +lads left the tent.</p> + +<p>“By Jove!” exclaimed Chester, as they walked along, +“you spotted de Reslau just in time. Another moment and it would +have been too late. Tell me, how did you happen to hit it?”</p> + +<p>“Ever since I pulled Brunnoi’s beard off this +morning,” replied Hal, “another face has kept flashing into +my mind. I could not make it out clearly until just as we stood before +the firing squad. Then I saw it as plain as day.”</p> + +<p>“It’s lucky for us that you did,” said Chester +with enthusiasm. “But here comes Alexis. He’ll be glad to +know that Brunnoi has been disposed of.”</p> + +<p>And he was.</p> + +<p>“But you make much over a small matter,” he said.</p> + +<p>“Small matter!” exclaimed Chester. “I should say +that proving Brunnoi and Count de Reslau were one and the same person +was quite a big matter.”</p> + +<p>“If you had asked me,” returned Alexis calmly, “I +could have told you that several days ago.”</p> + +<p>“You could?” cried both lads in a single voice.</p> + +<p>“Of course. I knew it right along. You see, my eyes are +unusually keen. I remember once how this keen sight proved of great +advantage. We were on a raid. The officer in command, using his +glasses, could not quite make out objects moving some miles away. He +called upon me. My eyes, being far more powerful than the glass, showed +me plainly what was going on, and we were thus kept from falling into a +trap. Then I remember another case―”</p> + +<p>“One is enough,” said Hal dryly. “If you knew +Brunnoi and Count de Reslau were the same person, why didn’t you +say so?”</p> + +<p>“Why,” said Alexis in no wise disconcerted, “I +didn’t see that it made any difference.”</p> + +<p>“Then your sight is not so good after all,” said +Chester. “But what are we going to do now, Hal?”</p> + +<p>“Well,” said Hal, “I guess we might as well go get +Marquis and return to our regiment. Our work here is done.”</p> + +<p>The dog was indeed glad to accompany his three friends forth once +more, and so, procuring three fiery chargers, the trio set out to +rejoin their regiment at the front–some miles to the west of the +city of Lodz.</p> + +<p>Most of the officers of the regiment to which the three were +attached had been killed in the previous battle, and so when they +finally reached it, Alexis found that instead of being a lieutenant he +had become a captain.</p> + +<p>“You see,” he told the boys confidentially, “a +brave man always comes into his own. You will see how these fellows +fight with me at their head. They will be a whole lot different, I can +tell you.”</p> + +<p>The Russians had intrenched themselves along the entire front, as +had the Germans only a short distance away. During the days in which +the lads had been in the midst of the Carpathians, there had been only +skirmishing between the opposing forces. Long range artillery duels +raged incessantly; but there had been little work for the cavalry and +infantry.</p> + +<p>There had of course been several charges and counter charges, but +the advantage rested with neither side. The Russian troops, in spite of +the cold weather, made themselves comfortable in the trenches, wrapped +to the chin in their heavy sheepskin garments. Used to severe winter +weather, the Russian troops did not fare as badly as did the Germans, +who suffered severely.</p> + +<p>The lads’ regiment was stationed near the center of the long +line of battle. Preparations for a movement of some sort were being +made on all sides. Troops were being hurried here and there, and +officers dashed hither and yon. Occasionally the men burst into song; +while from the German trenches came the chanting of the “Watch on +the Rhine.” The men of both armies were making the best of the +situation, and seemed reasonably happy.</p> + +<p>From his pocket one of the Russian officers now produced a pack of +cards. Alexis, invited to take a hand, consented, but Hal and Chester +refused.</p> + +<p>“What’s the matter?” demanded the officer. +“Are you too good to play cards?”</p> + +<p>“Not a bit,” smiled Hal. “We simply don’t +care to play, that’s all. We do play occasionally, for pastime, +but we don’t gamble.”</p> + +<p>“Don’t gamble!” exclaimed the officer. “How +can you play cards if you don’t gamble. Come on now, we need two +more players.”</p> + +<p>“No,” said Hal, decidedly. “We shall have to ask +you to excuse us.”</p> + +<p>Even Alexis glanced at the lads in astonishment. Plainly this was +beyond his comprehension, as gambling among the Cossacks is an ordinary +pastime. But the other officer was not satisfied. He arose and came +directly up to Hal.</p> + +<p>“You must play with us,” he said.</p> + +<p>“I am sorry,” replied Hal, “but we do not care to +play.”</p> + +<p>“Afraid, eh?” said the Russian.</p> + +<p>“No,” replied Hal, “we are not afraid. We simply +don’t care to play.”</p> + +<p>“You are cowards,” said the Russian, and jostled Hal +with his shoulder.</p> + +<p>Hal stood his ground and refused to be pushed aside. The Russian +reached out a thumb and finger and pulled Hal’s nose. Then he +staggered back, for Hal had sent his fist crashing against his +chest.</p> + +<p>Quickly the Russian officer drew his sword and sprang upon the lad, +who also drew his weapon and stood on guard. But now Alexis leaped to +his feet, and his own sword struck up the weapons of the others.</p> + +<p>“Enough of this,” he said sternly. “Put up your +swords.”</p> + +<p>“I have no desire to fight,” replied Hal calmly.</p> + +<p>“I know you haven’t,” sneered the Russian. +“You are afraid. But I demand satisfaction for that +blow.”</p> + +<p>“Well,” said Alexis, “if you must fight, let it be +with fists.”</p> + +<p>“Any way suits me,” said the Russian.</p> + +<p>“If he insists on a fight, I am willing to give it to +him,” said Hal, and quickly threw off his coat.</p> + +<p>The Russian also discarded his heavy coat, and the two squared off. +It was perfectly plain to Hal that the Russian, although considerably +larger than himself, was no boxer, and he had little doubt of the +outcome, for the lad was proficient in the use of his fists.</p> + +<p>The Russian came forward with a rush. Hal sidestepped neatly, and +the huge fist passed by harmlessly. Hal sent a quick sharp blow to the +Russian’s cheek, staggering him a bit. The latter turned and +again rushed at the lad.</p> + +<p>Quite a crowd had now collected around the combatants and watched +the contest eagerly. As the Russian rushed at him this time, Hal struck +up the blow with his left forearm, and stepping in close planted his +right over his opponent’s heart. The Russian staggered back, and +at the same time Hal sent a series of left and right jabs to his +opponent’s face.</p> + +<p>But the Russian, recovering, bored in again, striking out wildly at +the lad. The latter gave a clever exhibition of footwork, and not a +single blow landed. At the same time he continued to tap the Russian +lightly on either side of the face.</p> + +<p>Suddenly the Russian lowered his hands and stepped back.</p> + +<p>“I quit,” he said, smiling foolishly. “There is no +use trying to hit a man when he runs away all the time. Now with swords +or pistols―”</p> + +<p>“There will be no swords or pistols used while I am here to +prevent it,” exclaimed Alexis.</p> + +<p>At that very instant the clear call of a bugle sounded in the +Russian trenches. Quickly all personal animosities were forgotten, and +the men sprang to their posts.</p> + +<p>It was the signal for an advance.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_19'></a>CHAPTER XIX.<br /><span +class='fss'>THE ATTACK.</span></h2> + +<p>The reconnoitering cavalry of the advancing forces gave way to +groups of infantry, scattered in loose formation, feeling their way +toward the German trenches. The points and small flanking parties of +the advance guards, in front of each column of advance, crept along +with straining eyes in search of the enemy’s line of +observation.</p> + +<p>A few hundred yards to the rearward the supports advanced alertly, +ready to scatter into a thin line of skirmishers at the first shot and +rush ahead to where the points halted. In the rear of them the infantry +columns, with one rumble of artillery close to the front, moved and +halted, as the thin line to the front paused for a moment to scan +ahead, then pushed on again.</p> + +<p>Out of the stillness of the dew-dripping woods in front, the shot +came. There was no reply for a moment, then two or three closer reports +rang loud in reply; then there came another pause, and as the hurrying +supports deployed and flung themselves behind the nearest cover, in +momentary scanning before pushing ahead to investigate decisively, +there came a short, ragged volley from out ahead.</p> + +<p>The reports were flat and dull, as a rule, but a few cracked +viciously as though fired close at hand. These last followed the vacuum +of low-flying bullets and had a spat and twang of their own.</p> + +<p>For weeks these two armies had been facing each other; for a week +assault had wrestled with counter assault and the armies had striven +time after time to snatch an advantage from a massing of columns, or a +seeming check.</p> + +<p>For miles to right and left, every road, every footpath, every few +yards of broken ground was trodden by the feet of short columns, +prepared to charge into lines at the needed moment, when the fire of +the enemy became a menace. The trenches were abandoned in the rear, yet +should the columns in the rear, which by the heads formed a long, long +line of supports, be hurled back in repulse after an unsuccessful +attack, the trenches would be greeted as comfortable old friends and +reoccupied.</p> + +<p>The leading columns deployed into thin lines, with short intervals +between the men, as the shrapnel broke. From out the blur of the +mingling of landscape and sky there came, simultaneously, a whir, a +crash, and the quick dash of shrapnel balls over the ground, and of the +brief flash which marked the shrapnel’s burst there remained only +a dimly-seen lingering cloud of dirty smoke and some silent, writhing +forms on the ground.</p> + +<p>Then came crash after crash, as the hostile artillery opened in +strength. The silence of the morning fled into a hideous din as the +infantry broke into a dog trot and pushed ahead.</p> + +<p>There came a clank of trace chains and the pounding of hoofs +mingling with hoarse commands as the artillery of the Russians wheeled +out of column to position in battery, the ring of hastily-opened +breechblocks, the hollow thump of the blocks closing and the shrill +notes of a silvery whistle. Then the earth began to tremble.</p> + +<p>Thunderbolt after thunderbolt seemed to be discharging close in the +rear, until the very trees shook and men swayed under the compression +of air in the vicinity. Over the heads of the silent infantry, shrapnel +shrieked in reply, one after another, as the batteries opened with +salvos from flank to flank.</p> + +<p>Through the gaps between the belching batteries poured the infantry, +the columns dashing forward until, beneath the trajectory of the guns, +it was safe to spread out in the always thin line of the infantry +advance. The leading lines pushed on till they disappeared in the yet +dim light, and at a short distance behind them came others, until it +seemed that the end would never come, and that a hurrying city was +passing.</p> + +<p>Ahead, the leading infantry line, absorbing the scattered men of the +first light contact line, halted at command under the mounting rifle +fire of the enemy, halted and flung itself prone, while ready hands +reached backward for intrenching tools, and the line scraped, clawed, +scooped and burrowed into the fresh earth in shallow pits, and went +about its business of returning the German fire.</p> + +<p>Then a second thin line ran up and merged with the first. Again +shovel and small mattock came into play and the volume of fire +redoubled. Above the cracking of the rifles the only sounds to be heard +were the sharp whistles of the officers. They shrilled in a variety of +notes and combinations, yet with an understood speech of their own, for +in parts of the line the fire slackened and two or three men left their +shelter and crept forward a few paces; or, crouching down low, dashed +ahead until the whistles spoke again.</p> + +<p>Intrenching tool again; then fire. That was the order of the +advance. More men crept or rushed to the new position to dig themselves +into the ground and open fire, until the entire line had advanced a few +yards under the hostile shots and a new line occupied the shelter +trenches recently abandoned.</p> + +<p>Here and there lay quiet forms across the path of advance. The hardy +bodies in the well-fitting uniforms seemed pitilessly small and their +clothing hung in baggy folds. Their comrades passed them by with hardly +a glance. The litter sections were far to the rear, for their time was +not yet. Duty called for assault, not for succor.</p> + +<p>The thunder of the contending batteries continued. Over the hastily +carved trenches the hostile shrapnel scorched their way, singing along +with a note of wild rage, searching the crevasses and folds of the +ground and scoring the earth.</p> + +<p>But the Russian infantry still advanced.</p> + +<p>Quietly filling the gaps that had grown in the firing line since the +attack commenced, the supporting lines came to the front. Each +accession of reënforcements seemed to give an added impetus to the +forward movement, for upon the arrival of each fresh contingent the +line surged ahead like breakers on a coast, and, like the incoming +tide, each surge left its mark higher upon the strand.</p> + +<p>With a calmness which bespoke experience, despite the light of +battle which blazed in their eyes, the new men brought and distributed +fresh bandoliers of ammunition to those who had gone before, then took +their places alongside to aid in its expenditure. The lines were not +straight. They zigzagged a trifle. There was no time for chalk-mark +adjustment or inspection, and the moment a panting body struck the +ground after a forward rush, the earth began to fly on the spot beneath +the chop of the trench-digging tools, and the hot rifles to speak.</p> + +<p>Men growled, muttered and shouted. Under the fighting fog that beset +each one in its own way, there came snatches of song, humming and +whistling. There were those, too, who fought silently, as though deeply +wrapped in thought, and there was bickering when a hasty comrade +crowded too close for free operation of the flying breechbolts; yet the +faces were ever turned to the front, except when they turned to the sky +or the earth, and nerveless hands fell sprawling with half-emptied +rifles.</p> + +<p>Where officers, binoculars in hand, bent hastily to the line, men +detached themselves at intervals, and clawing at their belts, seized +the wire cutters pendant there and crawled forward. Now and then one of +the creeping ones would spring into the air and topple over, but the +rest, apparently paying no heed, continued on their way toward where +the Germans had erected wire entanglements to hold the stormers under +the blast of the enemy’s fire.</p> + +<p>Ahead, the trenches of the Germans crackled and spat with fury, and +even under the ceaseless rain of shrapnel from above the assaulting +lines the enemy kept his place. The firing line had thickened until it +was a solid mass, one man deep, and in the rear line after line had +sprung to its feet and was closing up in support to the crucial +assault. At the trenches of the defenders, batteries, with horses +falling and being cut away in an instant, dashed to the line, +unlimbered and poured in their scattering salutations of zero shrapnel +to the men in front.</p> + +<p>Came a clank and rattle of bayonets snapped onto the muzzles of the +assaulting line; then, with a last frenzied emptying of magazines, the +lines sprang to foot, and with hoarse voices screeching at top note, +the slender line charged forward.</p> + +<p>The trenches were lined with the defenders in an instant. The rifle +fire redoubled in intensity and the artillery, which had come up to +stem the tide, or assault when the supporting batteries of the attack +were compelled to hold their fire for fear of obliterating their own +attacking lines, barked at four-second intervals, opening great gaps in +the racing line at every discharge.</p> + +<p>In rear of the supporting lines of the assault, which were closing +up at a dead run, galloped the batteries which were to make a rallying +point in case the assault failed, or occupy the trenches, should the +defenders be driven out, and the cannoneers clutched the side rails as +the pieces swayed and rocked across the rough ground and clustered +bodies which strewed the field.</p> + +<p>At the crest of the parapet the lines, attack and defense met with a +ring of steel. Bayonets flashed, darted, parried and struck. Rifle +butts whirled above bare heads and the stocks crashed down through bone +and flesh. From both sides came a rain of hand grenades, bombs which +exploded upon touch. From the rear of the trenches there came running +formed troops, to assist in the repulse of the Russians, and as the +supporting lines of the attack threw themselves into the fray, the +whirling, struggling, fighting lines on the trenches’ top +thickened and swayed.</p> + +<p>The line sagged, bulged, trembled, and broke in huge gaps. Into the +splaying breaches there rushed fresh troops from front and rear, and +the lines thickened and swayed again. Men discarded their arms to lock +in one another’s embrace, fighting to the last.</p> + +<p>The din was deafening, yet above it there rang out the detonation +and shock of a great explosion, where a delayed mine belched upward +under the pressure of the hastening troops coming up with the attacking +reserve. Earth, stones, wire entanglements, arms and men shot upward in +a dense geyser of death, and came down in the midst of the fierce +fighting.</p> + +<p>Then the line broke again, and the shattered reserves of the attack, +summoning the last resources, poured into the breach with bayonet and +magazine.</p> + +<p>The defense gave way.</p> + +<p>Crumpled under the last despairing hurling of last reserves, the +entrenched line shuddered along its length, then the line lost its +cohesion, stood irresolute for a moment, then fled precipitately to the +rear.</p> + +<p>The whistles of the Russian officers blew again and again. Officers +had fallen until corporals and sergeants commanded platoons and +companies; yet they, too, had their whistles and knew their duties; and +out of the scramble of the attack, regardless of company, regiment or +brigade, the Russians fell into rough line, knelt, and opened fire upon +the routed enemy, while the supporting batteries dashed to the +trenches, unlimbered and belched fire and iron into the fleeing +mass.</p> + +<p>The standards of the Russians, which had changed hands a dozen +times, during the course of the assault, were planted on the works; the +troops themselves, exhausted and spent by the might and fury of their +efforts, threw themselves into tired heaps as other brigades came up to +hold the position.</p> + +<p>The trenches were won!</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_20'></a>CHAPTER XX.<br /><span +class='fss'>THE DEATH OF A FRIEND.</span></h2> + +<p>Hal, Chester and Alexis had been in the midst of the fray, where the +fighting was the thickest. Not in the first line of attack, they had +advanced with the first reserves. And beside them, snapping, biting and +snarling, strode Marquis.</p> + +<p>Now the herculean prowess of the giant Cossack stood them all in +good stead. More than once Hal or Chester would have gone down, or been +trampled under foot by the troops behind, had not the quick eye of +Alexis signaled out their danger and his powerful arm come to their +aid. Guarding himself perfectly from the sword and bayonet thrusts of +the enemy, after the fighting became hand to hand, the Cossack fought +like a madman, as did others of his race, hurling himself upon his foes +with almost superhuman ferocity.</p> + +<p>For the first time the two lads had the experience of digging +trenches as they advanced upon the enemy, and in spite of the fact that +they were officers, they did not shirk the work. Just before reaching +the parapet, the first line of reserves–to which the friends were +attached–joined the original first line and sprang into the +trenches together.</p> + +<p>There they fought with desperation. Not a word was exchanged between +them, although they fought side by side. There was no time for +conversation. The press was too thick, and death too near.</p> + +<p>But now that the Germans had turned to flee, the Russians sent up a +wild cry of triumph. Hal, Chester and Alexis rested upon their weapons, +watching the troops pour a hail of lead into the flying foe. Marquis +advanced several paces ahead of the farthest Russian troops, stood up +on his hind legs and let out a bark of joy. Bullets flew around him, +and Chester, realizing the dog’s danger, whistled sharply. +Marquis turned and wagged his tail at his friend, and opened his mouth +in one more joyful bark.</p> + +<p>It was at that moment that a German bullet struck him. Without a +sound the noble animal crumpled up and fell to the ground. The ball had +pierced his throat. But life was not extinct. Marquis struggled to his +feet, and dragged himself toward Hal and Chester, who, having seen him +fall, dashed toward him.</p> + +<p>Gently Chester lifted Marquis’ heavy weight up in his arms, +holding him so that the blood would not flow so rapidly from the gaping +wound in his throat. Marquis looked up into the lad’s face, and +uttered a low, painful bark. His tail wagged.</p> + +<p>Quickly the lads hurried back to Alexis and as quickly sought out a +surgeon. Chester laid Marquis gently on the ground, and the surgeon +bent over him. After a brief examination he arose and shook his +head.</p> + +<p>“No hope,” he said quietly. “The bullet pierced +his jugular vein.”</p> + +<p>“Isn’t there something you can do?” pleaded +Chester, tears streaming down his face.</p> + +<p>The surgeon shook his head sadly.</p> + +<p>“Nothing,” he said, and hurried away.</p> + +<p>Chester picked Marquis up again, and followed by Hal and Alexis, +made his way toward the rear, where the troops were more scattered, and +where there was none to bother them. Hal drew off his coat, and Chester +laid the dog on it.</p> + +<p>Marquis did not whimper. He, as well as his three friends, seemed to +know that death was not far off, and he was prepared to meet the end +bravely, as a soldier-dog should. He turned slightly and licked +Chester’s hand that lay upon his head. Chester patted him gently, +but he was beyond words.</p> + +<p>Alexis extended a huge hand and softly stroked the dog’s soft +body.</p> + +<p>“Poor fellow!” he said to himself.</p> + +<p>Marquis’ keen ears caught these words, and he turned feebly +toward the giant Cossack, and strained slightly toward him. At the same +time he slowly raised a paw. Chester saw the movement.</p> + +<p>“He wants to shake hands with you, Alexis,” he said +brokenly.</p> + +<p>The giant drew nearer, and gravely took Marquis’ right paw in +his great hand. Once, twice, three times he shook it gently, then laid +it upon the ground and turned away. Marquis moved restlessly, and +uttered a short bark. He was trying to see Hal, who was kneeling behind +him.</p> + +<p>Hal arose and came around. To him also Marquis extended his paw, and +Hal grasped it and pressed it. Then, shifting his position slightly, +the dog also extended the paw to Chester. He seemed to know well that +the end was swiftly approaching, and he wished to shake hands with all +his friends before he passed away.</p> + +<p>Now the three gathered about the head of their dying friend. Alexis +clenched his great fists and spoke to Marquis.</p> + +<p>“I shall see that you are avenged,” he said fiercely. +“Twenty German lives will not pay for this day’s work, but +I’ll do the best I can. Do you understand, Marquis?”</p> + +<p>Marquis’ tail beat a weak tattoo upon the ground, and he +barked feebly. He understood.</p> + +<p>“I’ll do it!” said Alexis. “You may rest +assured of that.”</p> + +<p>Now the end was fast approaching. Marquis’ breath came in +quick gasps. Suddenly he staggered to his feet, stood upright a second, +turned his face toward the distant enemy, and gave utterance to one +sharp bark–a bark of defiance. Then he sank to the ground.</p> + +<p>His three friends dropped to their knees and bent over him. He +looked up into their faces and it seemed to all that he smiled at them. +His tail struck the ground feebly, once, twice. He shook once with a +silent convulsion. Then his body straightened out and stiffened. He lay +still.</p> + +<p>Marquis was dead.</p> + +<p>His three friends rose slowly to their feet, and lifted their caps +from their heads.</p> + +<p>“Good old Marquis!” said Hal. “But he died as a +soldier should!”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” said Chester, “and with almost his last +breath he breathed defiance to the Germans, whom he hated.”</p> + +<p>“There wasn’t a better or braver soldier in the Russian +army,” said Alexis. “We must bury him with +honors.”</p> + +<p>“We shall!” cried Chester.</p> + +<p>“I am somewhat handy with a knife,” said Alexis. +“I shall carve him a little monument.”</p> + +<p>“And he shall be laid to rest with full military +honors,” said Chester.</p> + +<p>And so it was done.</p> + +<p>All that day Alexis worked upon the little monument. When it was +finally completed, all was in readiness for the burial. The dog had +made friends in the regiment. Not a man but had become attached to him; +and so it was no small funeral cortege that escorted the body of the +dog-hero to his last resting place.</p> + +<p>From the quartermaster Chester had secured a large French flag.</p> + +<p>“He shall be buried beneath his own flag,” he said, and +spreading the tricolor upon the ground, he laid the stiffened body of +Marquis upon it.</p> + +<p>Gently he wrapped it about the dog, and then, while practically the +whole regiment stood at attention around the little grave, he placed +the body in the ground and stepped back. A volley was fired over the +grave, and the lads shoveled in the earth.</p> + +<p>Now Alexis approached, and, making a small hole at the head of the +grave, set up the little monument. And when he had finished, the +soldiers crowded around to read the epitaph that the giant Cossack had +inscribed in the hard wood. It was this:</p> + +<p>“Marquis–killed on the field of honor!”</p> + +<p>It was upon the following day that the welcome news came that there +was to be further action. Practically every Cossack regiment at the +front in Poland was ordered back to Lodz, their places being taken by +other Russian cavalry and infantry.</p> + +<p>Again in Lodz the lads learned what this new movement meant. Grand +Duke Nicholas, the investment of Galicia having been successful, had +decided upon an immediate invasion of Hungary. The Cossacks had been +called to lead the dash over the Carpathians into the heart of the +enemy’s territory.</p> + +<p>Hal and Chester had an audience of the Grand Duke. The latter +summoned them to his quarters to offer an apology for his hasty action +in ordering them shot some days before. Also he talked a little of the +proposed invasion.</p> + +<p>“Sixty thousand Cossack cavalry will be the advance +guard,” he informed them. “Behind these will come the +infantry in great force. I plan to have a million men in Hungary within +two months. If we are successful in forcing a passage of the mountains, +and I am sure we shall be, Budapest will be at our mercy, with Vienna +as the next goal.</p> + +<p>“In the meantime the Poland campaign will be pressed, that the +Germans may be unable to go to the aid of the Austrians in the south. +The thing that I fear now is that Turkey may be drawn into the war on +the side of the German emperor. The Kaiser has brought great pressure +to bear upon them, and I fear that they cannot long be kept +neutral.”</p> + +<p>“What effect would that have upon the invasion of +Hungary?” questioned Chester.</p> + +<p>“It would unquestionably delay it for days, possibly weeks. +While we are prepared for the Turks, nevertheless it would probably +necessitate the sending of reënforcements toward the border, and +naturally I should have to draw upon the forces I am now sending into +Hungary.”</p> + +<p>“I see,” replied Chester. “But the Turk, as a +fighting man, doesn’t amount to much, as I understand +it.”</p> + +<p>“In the recent Balkan war they did not show much fighting +prowess, it is true,” said the Grand Duke, “but officered +by Germans, and under German discipline, there may be a different story +to tell.”</p> + +<p>“But there is no danger of their affecting the ultimate +outcome of the war?” asked Hal.</p> + +<p>“None,” was the confident reply. “What it will +mean, however, is that Turkey, as a nation, will be wiped off the map +of Europe, and, possibly, of Asia also.”</p> + +<p>“The sooner the better,” was Hal’s comment.</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke smiled.</p> + +<p>“It may take time,” he said, “but it will be done +just so surely as Turkey casts in her fortunes with Germany.”</p> + +<p>After some further talk the lads left the Grand Duke’s tent, +and rejoined their regiment. Everything was now practically ready for +the advance to the southward, and the troops were eagerly awaiting the +word that was to send them into the Carpathians, to strike a decisive +blow at the Austrians.</p> + +<p>And the word was given early the following morning.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_21'></a>CHAPTER XXI.<br /><span +class='fss'>RAIDING.</span></h2> + +<p>At a fierce gallop the troop of Cossacks bore down upon the little +mountain town–firing at a detachment of Austrian soldiers who +ventured forth to give them battle–without checking their speed. +This band of Cossacks, reconnoitering well ahead of the main advance +guard, was probably 1,000 strong; the Austrians opposing them much +less. With the rapidly advancing Russians were Hal, Chester and +Alexis.</p> + +<p>The advance of the Czar’s troops to the Carpathians had been +without incident. Whenever troops of the enemy had opposed them they +had been put to flight without difficulty. The cavalry, dashing rapidly +ahead, had outdistanced their cavalry and artillery support, and the +entire force of mounted men–60,000 of them–were in the +midst of the wild mountains.</p> + +<p>Harassed from front and, now that they had advanced well into the +mountains, also from the sides and rear, the Cossacks nevertheless +pushed on. From behind rocks and trees, isolated bands of Austrians +fired upon them, doing great execution, disappearing in the hills when +the Cossacks turned upon them.</p> + +<p>The reconnoitering force to which the lads were attached dashed down +upon the little mountain town, the sun gleaming on their lances and +revolver barrels. In vain did the Austrian officers urge their men to +stand firm. After one volley at the approaching horsemen, they broke +and fled, scattering in all directions. The very name, Cossack, spread +terror.</p> + +<p>Right into the middle of the little village dashed the troop. Now +from every window came a hail of lead, and the Cossacks, apparently +trapped, turned this way and that, not knowing which way to go. Struck +by a rifle bullet, the officer in command threw up his hands and +toppled from his horse. Quickly Alexis sprang to the head of the men, +Hal and Chester beside him.</p> + +<p>“Dismount!” cried Alexis.</p> + +<p>The cavalrymen threw themselves from their horses, and at a second +command, rushed directly upon the houses. With heavy kicks they smashed +in the doors and rushed upon the occupants within. They soon put an end +to these snipers.</p> + +<p>But now, around one side of the town appeared a troop of Austrian +horse.</p> + +<p>Hal raised a cry of warning, and quickly the Cossacks turned and +leaped upon their own horses; but the Austrian cavalry had no mind to +give battle to their foes, and after pouring in a volley, turned and +fled down the narrow mountain pass.</p> + +<p>“After them!” cried Alexis.</p> + +<p>He put spurs to his horse and dashed ahead, his men following +closely.</p> + +<p>The Austrians had not gone far when their leader called a halt and +consulted with his subordinate officer. They were, the leader knew, not +far from a point where he could expect reënforcements.</p> + +<p>A plan was quickly formed. The Austrians divided into two parts. The +foremost blocked the road–down which the Cossacks were rapidly +approaching–near a turn, so as to remain unseen by the +approaching enemy until almost the moment of contact. The second force +stayed some rods behind the first, forming in two lines, one along each +side of the road. Some were armed with lances and sabers, but many also +carried rifles.</p> + +<p>As for the Cossacks, all carried lances and revolvers.</p> + +<p>The Russians went forward at a gallop. Alexis was expecting to +overtake the enemy, but he was hardly prepared for the suddenness of +the encounter.</p> + +<p>Ere he could give an order, there came one loud, flaming, whistling +discharge from that living barrier drawn up across the road. +Alexis’ horse reared, as did others of the troop. Some of the men +came to a quick stop, others were borne forward by the impetus of their +former speed, but reined in for orders. No man fell, though one groaned +and two hurled epithets at the foe.</p> + +<p>Alexis, now that he had his horse under control, drew his sword with +his right hand, his pistol with his left, which also held the rein, and +ordered his men to charge, to fire at the moment of contact, then to +cut, slash and club.</p> + +<p>The first line of Austrians, as soon as they had fired, retreated +between the two lines of supports, stopping at some further distance to +reform. The second line, being thus cleared of the first, poured a hail +of bullets into the Cossacks as the latter were caught between +them.</p> + +<p>Many fell, but the others turned on the second barrier with furious +force, some, however, rushing upon the reforming first line.</p> + +<p>They were the best riders in the world, and many a one of them held +his lance aloft in one hand, his revolver raised in the other, the rein +loose on his horse’s neck.</p> + +<p>The Austrians and Alexis’ foremost men fired at the same +moment. The Austrians had not time to turn and flee, for the Cossacks, +unchecked by this second greeting of fire, came on at headlong +speed.</p> + +<p>“At ’em, boys!” cried Hal excitedly, firing his +revolver at a tall Austrian officer, who fell sidewise from his +horse.</p> + +<p>An Austrian officer struck with a sword at Chester’s left arm, +but only knocked the pistol from his hand. The lad found himself +threatened on the right by a trooper, and slashed at him with his +sword. The blow went home, but the sword’s end became entangled +with the victim’s breast knot. A second trooper brought his rifle +butt down heavily upon the sword, and it snapped off.</p> + +<p>Chester felt a keen smart in his left leg. It came from a second +sword blow aimed by the Austrian officer, who might have followed it +with a third, but that he was now attacked elsewhere. Chester had no +sooner clapped his hand to his wounded leg than he was stunned by a +blow from the rifle butt of the trooper who had previously struck the +sword. He fell forward on his horse’s neck, which he grasped +madly with both arms.</p> + +<p>Still holding the broken sword in his right hand, Chester now lapsed +from a sense of the tumult, the plunging and shrieking horses, the whir +and clash of swords, the thuds of rifle blows, into half consciousness, +while the unguided horse turned suddenly and made off in the direction +from which he had come.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile the Cossacks had been pushing the Austrians back. Hal and +Alexis, fighting side by side, were so far unharmed. Right into the +midst of the enemy they plunged, and for several minutes could see +nothing but flying swords and lances. Then, at a signal, the Austrians +turned and fled.</p> + +<p>Hal turned to speak to Chester, but the latter was not there. In +alarm, he called Alexis’ attention to the fact that Chester was +missing. Quickly Alexis ordered a halt and looked around. Bodies +strewed the road, and leaping from their horses, the two investigated. +Chester was not there.</p> + +<p>“Great Scott!” exclaimed Hal. “What can have +happened to him?”</p> + +<p>Alexis questioned his men. One remembered that a great black charger +had dashed through the troop in the midst of the battle and had fled to +the rear. He remembered that a form was upon the animal’s +back.</p> + +<p>“It must have been Chester,” said Hal to Alexis. +“Do you go on in pursuit of the Austrians, and I will go back and +see if I can find him.”</p> + +<p>“Good,” said Alexis. “The horse probably will run +back to the main column. You should not have much trouble finding +him.”</p> + +<p>With a word of command Alexis ordered the troop ahead, and Hal +started back on the trail of his chum.</p> + +<p>When Chester was again aware of things he was still clasping the +horse’s neck and was being borne along he knew not whither. His +head ached and his left leg pained him greatly. He was dizzy and too +weak to raise himself from his position. He could not hear any sound of +fighting. He tried to sit up and look around, but this added to his +pain, so he fell forward on the neck of his horse again.</p> + +<p>Suddenly the horse stopped.</p> + +<p>Once more Chester tried to sit up. This time he was successful, and +in spite of the pain glanced about him. The horse had halted near a +little house, set back some fifty feet from the road, and even as he +looked up a woman came from the doorway. She started in astonishment at +the sight of the horse and its wounded rider, and hastened back into +the house. She reappeared in a moment, however, accompanied by a second +woman, the latter armed with a huge revolver.</p> + +<p>The two now approached the lad and lifted him from the horse. They +supported him as he dragged himself into the house, and dropped weakly +into a chair. Then the women stepped back and pointed the revolver at +him.</p> + +<p>“You shall remain here,” she said, “until I can +turn you over to the Austrians.”</p> + +<p>Chester was somewhat surprised. By the assistance given him by the +women, he had thought that, after resting up, he would be allowed to +rejoin his friends; but the set expression on the woman’s face +told the lad that she meant what she said.</p> + +<p>The second woman approached with water and bandages and soon bound +up his wounds. Then the lad was escorted to another room, which looked +out upon the road. The woman mounted guard over him with her +revolver.</p> + +<p>“Some of our troops will be here before long,” she told +him. “Until then I shall guard you.”</p> + +<p>All this time Chester retained his hold on the broken sword. +Suddenly, down the road, came the sound of a galloping horse. Chester +glanced through the window and in a moment he had made out the figure +of Hal. Quickly he stepped to the window, and before his captor could +prevent him, shattered the window pane with his broken sword.</p> + +<p>“Hal!” he cried at the top of his voice. “Hal! +Here I am, wounded and a prisoner!”</p> + +<p>The woman hurled herself upon the lad and bore him back out of +sight. In his weakened condition he was no match for her. She thrust +him back into the chair. He turned his eyes to the window. Hal had +passed on.</p> + +<p>“Great Scott!” ejaculated Chester. “He +didn’t hear me!”</p> + +<p>But Hal had heard. He recognized the sound of his friend’s +voice, and realized that he was in trouble of some kind. Likewise he +surmised what the trouble was, for he knew that they were in the heart +of a hostile country. Therefore, he did not check the speed of his +horse at once, but rode some distance further before drawing rein. Then +he dismounted and tied his horse to a sapling.</p> + +<p>Springing in among the trees, he advanced cautiously toward the +house. Both women, secure in the belief that he had passed on, turned +to taunt Chester. The latter shut his lips grimly and refused to make a +reply.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, from the next room, came a tremendous clattering of pots +and pans.</p> + +<p>Both women jumped to their feet.</p> + +<p>“There is someone out there!” cried one of the women +excitedly.</p> + +<p>With her revolver pointed straight before her she moved softly +toward the door. At the same moment Chester realized Hal’s ruse +and cried:</p> + +<p>“Look out, Hal!”</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_22'></a>CHAPTER XXII.<br /><span +class='fss'>AT BAY IN THE PASS.</span></h2> + +<p>When Hal, after creeping into the house through a window, had +inadvertently bumped into several pots and pans, knocking them to the +floor with a clatter, he drew his revolver and stood stockstill. He +heard Chester’s cry of warning, and, realizing that an enemy was +approaching, he drew a bead upon the doorway.</p> + +<p>An arm with a pistol appeared through the opening; there was a flash +of fire and a bullet sped past him. He fired quickly in return, and the +weapon of his unseen enemy dropped to the floor with a crash, followed +by a shrill scream of pain.</p> + +<p>“Great Scott, a woman!” cried Hal and leaped +forward.</p> + +<p>But the woman was more frightened than hurt. Realizing that she was +uninjured, as Hal came toward her, she leaped forward and threw her +arms about him, pinioning the lad’s hand that held his revolver +to his side. At the same moment she cried out to her companion:</p> + +<p>“Quick! Pick up the revolver and shoot him while I hold +him!”</p> + +<p>Hal realized that he was in grave danger and struggled fiercely to +free his hands. But his adversary was a very powerful woman, and having +gained a secure hold, Hal was unable to free himself.</p> + +<p>The woman who had been left to guard Chester, at the command of the +other, ran to her aid. Chester, holding to the back of the chair, drew +himself to his feet and staggered after her, still clinging to his +broken sword.</p> + +<p>As the woman stooped to pick up the revolver dropped by the other +when Hal’s bullet had struck her hand, Chester, in spite of the +pain of his wounds, leaped forward. As she arose to her feet and would +have fired point-blank at Hal, he knocked the weapon from her hand with +a sharp blow of his broken sword.</p> + +<p>Then coming quickly to Hal’s side he took the lad’s +revolver from him, and, stepping back, aimed it at the head of the +woman with whom his friend was struggling.</p> + +<p>“Release him instantly,” he ordered, “or I shall +fire!”</p> + +<p>The woman glanced at him over her shoulder, and smiled +tauntingly.</p> + +<p>“You wouldn’t shoot a woman,” she sneered.</p> + +<p>“I wouldn’t like to,” replied Chester, “but +if you have not released him and if both of you do not line up against +that wall with your hands in the air by the time I count three, I will +shoot, just as surely as I stand here. One, two―”</p> + +<p>The woman glanced at him. Her eyes must have told her that the lad +meant what he said, for, releasing Hal, she stepped quickly back and +raised her hands in the air. The second woman followed her example. +Chester stepped to Hal’s side, and extended the revolver to +him.</p> + +<p>“Take this quick!” he commanded.</p> + +<p>Hal did so, and without another word, Chester suddenly crumpled up +in a heap on the floor. He had fainted.</p> + +<p>Still covering the women with his revolver, Hal knelt by his +friend’s side. Then he turned to the woman.</p> + +<p>“Some water!” he commanded.</p> + +<p>Under the threatening muzzle of the revolver, the woman brought it, +and at a command from Hal, bathed Chester’s face. Then, still at +Hal’s command, she lifted the lad and placed him in a chair. Hal +took his seat near the window, for he knew that it was only a question +of time until some of the Russian troops passed in one way or the +other. His revolver still covered the two women, who sat without +uttering a word.</p> + +<p>Gradually the color returned to Chester’s face, and at last he +opened his eyes and looked about. He took in the situation at a glance, +and smiled faintly.</p> + +<p>“Well, I see we won,” he said.</p> + +<p>“We did,” replied Hal grimly. “How do you +feel?”</p> + +<p>“Better. I shall be all right now.”</p> + +<p>“Do you think you are equal to holding this revolver while I +go out and reconnoiter?”</p> + +<p>“Sure!” replied Chester. “Give it to +me.”</p> + +<p>Hal put the revolver in his friend’s hand.</p> + +<p>“Don’t hesitate to fire if one of them makes a false +move,” he said. “They would kill you in a moment if they +had the chance.”</p> + +<p>“I’ll use it if necessary; have no fear about +that,” replied Chester.</p> + +<p>Hal arose and left the room and the house. He gazed up and down the +road. There was no sign of troops, nor, by listening intently, could he +hear hoof beats. He made his way to where he had left his horse, and +tied it alongside the horse that had brought Chester to the house. Then +he returned to Chester and his prisoners.</p> + +<p>“There is no telling how long we may have to wait for our men +to return,” he said to his friend. “Do you suppose that if +I lifted you up on your horse you could ride?”</p> + +<p>“I am sure of it,” replied Chester.</p> + +<p>“That is the best plan,” said Hal. “Come, then, we +will try it.”</p> + +<p>He went to Chester’s side, and still holding the revolver in +his right hand, threw his left arm around his friend’s neck. +Chester put an arm about Hal’s shoulder, and thus supported, made +his way from the room without much pain.</p> + +<p>Hal made a stirrup of his hand, and Chester, putting his foot into +it, was soon astride his horse, though he winced somewhat with the pain +the exertion gave him. Then Hal sprang into his own saddle, and the two +turned their horses’ heads in the direction of the main body of +Cossacks.</p> + +<p>Along the narrow mountain trail they rode slowly for perhaps an hour +without the sight of either friend or foe. Then, rounding a sharp +turning in the pass, at the top of a steep section of the road, Hal +reined in suddenly with a muttered imprecation. Chester followed his +friend’s example.</p> + +<p>Perhaps half a mile away came a body of horsemen, perhaps twenty of +them. The sun, shining upon their uniforms, showed them to be +Austrians. Quickly Hal leaped from his horse, and putting forth his +utmost strength, rolled several great stones into place across the +road, absolutely barring the pass. Then, after Chester had been helped +to the ground, the two lads dropped behind this barrier.</p> + +<p>The pass at this point was hardly wide enough for four men to walk +abreast. On each side walls of rock rose straight up for perhaps twenty +feet. Hal looked at his two revolvers and the one he had taken from the +women in the house.</p> + +<p>“Lucky we have plenty of ammunition,” he said +calmly.</p> + +<p>He tested all weapons carefully and loaded them. Then he passed one +to Chester.</p> + +<p>“I am keeping two,” he explained, “because, being +wounded, you probably won’t be able to move about as quickly as I +will. I don’t know how long we shall be able to hold these +fellows off; but if they don’t rush us, we may be able to hold +out till help arrives.”</p> + +<p>“If they were Germans I wouldn’t feel quite so +easy,” said Chester; “but I don’t believe there is +much likelihood of Austrians rushing us.”</p> + +<p>“Right you are,” said Hal cheerfully. +“They’ll probably dismount, hide behind their horses and +try to pick us off.”</p> + +<p>As yet the Austrians were unaware of the presence of enemies in the +pass above them. They came on slowly, laughing and talking. Then one, +chancing to raise his head, saw the barrier in the pass. He called the +attention of the others to it. No sign of an enemy was visible, but the +Austrians approached very carefully.</p> + +<p>The two lads waited until the Austrians were so close that a miss +was impossible, then, taking deliberate aim, each fired once. Two of +the enemy fell to the roadside.</p> + +<p>There came a cry of dismay from the Austrians, and they reined in +their horses and sprang to the ground.</p> + +<p>But two of them had not been quick enough, and while they left their +horses at practically the same time as did the others, they did not +rise again to their feet.</p> + +<p>“Four!” said Chester calmly.</p> + +<p>“About ten, if Alexis were doing the counting,” said Hal +grimly. “But I would give a whole lot if he were here right +now.”</p> + +<p>The Austrians forced their horses to lie down, and took up their +positions behind them. Then they blazed away wildly at the barrier +ahead. They could see nothing at which to shoot, however, and their +bullets did no damage.</p> + +<p>“I wonder if the Austrians know this old hat trick?” +said Chester.</p> + +<p>Picking up a little stick, he put his cap upon it and raised it +slowly over the barrier. A hail of bullets flew about it. Chester took +deliberate aim at one of the Austrians who exposed himself, and Hal at +another. Again their revolvers cracked once each, and two Austrians bit +the dust.</p> + +<p>“We’ll be on even terms soon, if we keep this up,” +said Hal gleefully.</p> + +<p>Chester tried the cap trick again; but this time it did not work. +The Austrians had learned a lesson.</p> + +<p>For perhaps five minutes there was silence; then Hal, glancing +quickly over the barrier, saw one of the enemy jump to his feet and +dash straight toward the barrier. In his anxiety to pick the man off, +Hal fired too quickly, and missed.</p> + +<p>The man dashed on and flung himself to the ground right up against +the barrier. Here, for the moment, he was safe, for the lads could not +get at him without leaning over the barrier and thus exposing +themselves to the fire of the others.</p> + +<p>A second Austrian leaped to his feet and dashed forward. This time, +however, Hal did not hurry, and picked the man off with ease. Hardly +had his weapon spoken, when a shot from below went whizzing by his +head. Hal tumbled back to safety rapidly.</p> + +<p>“Great Scott!” he exclaimed. “We’ll have to +get that fellow away from there. He almost got me that time.”</p> + +<p>“Yes; but how?” demanded Chester.</p> + +<p>Hal considered the situation for some moments in silence. Then he +passed one of his two revolvers to Chester.</p> + +<p>“You blaze away as rapidly as you can at the Austrians with +those two guns,” he said. “Never mind whether you see +anything to shoot at or not. Just shoot when I give the word. +That’ll keep those fellows under cover. I’ll attend to this +one.”</p> + +<p>“What are you going to do?” asked Chester.</p> + +<p>“I’m going over after him!” said Hal grimly.</p> + +<p>“But he is liable to kill you!” exclaimed Chester in +alarm.</p> + +<p>“If I don’t get him,” said Hal quietly, “he +is sure to kill us both before long. Here goes!”</p> + +<p>At the moment that he sprang to the top of the barrier, Chester +opened upon the Austrians with both weapons. The man on the opposite +side of the barrier was taken by surprise by Hal’s sudden action. +Hal toppled over upon him without warning. With a startled cry the +Austrian raised his weapon to fire, but Hal was too quick for him.</p> + +<p>His revolver, less than a foot from the man’s head, spoke +sharply. Hal waited long enough to see that the work had been well +done, then rose to his feet, placed his hand upon the barrier, and, +amid a hail of bullets from the other Austrians, vaulted back to +safety.</p> + +<p>“I got him!” he told Chester quietly, as he turned and +emptied his own revolver at the enemy, who seemed on the point of +rushing forward.</p> + +<p>Quickly Chester reloaded his own revolvers, and it was well that he +did so, for the enemy seemed to be manifesting a desire to come forward +to the attack, apparently believing that the lads were out of +ammunition.</p> + +<p>The lads had now accounted for eight of the enemy, but they were not +so foolish as to believe that the Austrians would remain in their +present position and be picked off one at a time.</p> + +<p>“They’ll make a rush soon!” declared Chester.</p> + +<p>“Well,” replied Hal, “when they do we’ll be +ready for ’em. We can shoot straighter than they can while they +are on the run. We should be able to pick off two more each before they +get here.”</p> + +<p>“We’ll have a try at it,” said Chester simply.</p> + +<p>It was plainly evident that the Austrians were preparing for a move +of some kind. Suddenly, at a given signal, all twelve of the foe still +alive, sprang to their feet and made a concerted rush toward the +barrier.</p> + +<p>“Here they come!” cried Hal. “Steady +now!”</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_23'></a>CHAPTER XXIII.<br /><span +class='fss'>IN THE NICK OF TIME.</span></h2> + +<p>Hal, at the right of the barrier, confined his attention to that +side of the road, leaving Chester to deal with the enemy rushing +forward on the left. Three times the weapon of each lad spoke, and at +each shot an Austrian fell to the ground. Firing coolly and +deliberately at such close quarters, a miss was absolutely +impossible.</p> + +<p>But the lads did not have time to fire again. The enemy was at the +barrier; but, instead of hurling themselves over it, as both lads had +expected they would, they dropped to the ground on the opposite side of +the big rocks, and there they remained.</p> + +<p>It was indeed a peculiar situation–the enemies less than six +feet apart, separated only by a few rocks. Still the Austrians, in +spite of their losses, outnumbered the lads three to one.</p> + +<p>Now the rocks of the barrier began to move inward toward the +lads.</p> + +<p>“Great Scott!” cried Chester. “They are trying to +push these rocks over on us. If they tumble this barrier over, we +can’t hope to account for all six of them.”</p> + +<p>The lads braced themselves against the rocks; but the strength of +the two was not as great as the strength of the six. Such a contest +could have but one ending. The boys realized this as well as did their +foes.</p> + +<p>“Well,” said Hal calmly, “it looks as though they +had us. All ready for a last stand, Chester?”</p> + +<p>“All ready,” replied Chester calmly.</p> + +<p>“When I say jump,” instructed Hal, “leap +backward!”</p> + +<p>Chester nodded in understanding of this plan.</p> + +<p>“Now!” cried Hal. “Jump!”</p> + +<p>Both lads leaped quickly backward, and as they did so, the +barrier–freed of their supporting shoulders–tumbled inward, +while the six Austrians sprawled on the ground. For a moment the lads +had the advantage and they made the best of it.</p> + +<p>Hal’s revolver spoke and one Austrian straightened out in the +act of rising. Chester accounted for another, and then both lads sprang +in close upon the foe, thus precluding the use of the foe’s +firearms.</p> + +<p>Hal, grappling with two of the enemy, was giving a good account of +himself; but Chester, weak from the loss of blood, was unable to hold +his own. A blow from the butt of one of the Austrian’s revolvers +and he went to the ground.</p> + +<p>At that moment, from their rear, came the sound of rapidly galloping +hoofs. Around the bend some distance away dashed a troop of Cossacks, +Alexis himself at their head. The giant Cossack took in the situation +with one comprehensive glance and put spurs to his horse. The two +Austrians who had attacked Chester saw the advancing Cossacks, and, +turning, took to their heels.</p> + +<p>The two with whom Hal struggled, however, were too busily occupied +to notice the approach of reënforcements and sorely, each trying to +bring his revolver to bear.</p> + +<p>Alexis now jumped from his horse and dashed forward toward the +three. He stretched forth two mighty hands and plucked the Austrians +off the lad. Raising each high in the air, he stretched wide his arms, +and then brought them together with great force. There was a crunch as +the heads of the two met with terrific force. Then they hung limp in +the giant’s hands. He hurled them from him with a disdainful +gesture, and, snatching his revolver from its holster, dropped to his +knee and fired two shots in quick succession at the two remaining +enemy, who were fleeing down the road.</p> + +<p>His aim was true, and as the last of the Austrians bit the dust, +Alexis turned to where Chester lay and picked him up gently in his +arms. From his canteen he poured water over the lad’s face and +soon came signs of returning consciousness. Then he laid him gently on +the ground and turned to Hal.</p> + +<p>He gazed first at the lad, then at the dead bodies of the enemy and +then back to Hal.</p> + +<p>“Hm-m-m,” he said gruffly. “Quite a fight. But +where would you have been if Alexis had not arrived so +opportunely?”</p> + +<p>“Dead, I guess,” replied Hal quietly. “We owe you +our lives, but there is no need to tell you that we are +grateful.”</p> + +<p>“Not a bit,” said Alexis. “Thanks from one brave +man to another are never necessary; but did you see how easily I +disposed of those four Austrians?”</p> + +<p>“It was very pretty,” replied Hal.</p> + +<p>“Wasn’t it?” cried the giant gleefully. +“Still, it was a trifle. I remember the time that +I―”</p> + +<p>Hal walked over to Chester’s side and bent down and so did not +hear the story of Alexis’ might. The giant looked sorrowfully +after him for a moment, muttered to himself and then he walked after +him.</p> + +<p>Chester now sat up and looked about. His eyes rested on the dead +bodies.</p> + +<p>“Looks like Alexis had been here,” he muttered, for he +had not yet seen the giant.</p> + +<p>Alexis heard him and his face glowed with pleasure.</p> + +<p>“He is here,” he said, stepping forward.</p> + +<p>Chester’s face lighted up.</p> + +<p>“By Jove!” he exclaimed. “It is good to see you. +We have wished several times in the last hour that you were with us. We +needed you badly. However, you arrived just in time.”</p> + +<p>Alexis blushed like a schoolboy, for he was not used to hearing +others praise his prowess.</p> + +<p>“Yes, I did arrive in the nick of time,” he said +awkwardly. “But come, we must get away from here.”</p> + +<p>“Have you learned the strength of the enemy in the +mountains?” asked Hal a few minutes later, as they rode along +down the pass.</p> + +<p>“I learned enough to make sure that, without infantry and +artillery support, the cavalry will probably be annihilated,” +replied Alexis briefly. “By a dash, we might be able to reach the +plains of Hungary, but without support we should end our days there. I +shall counsel retreat.”</p> + +<p>“But I thought you would never counsel retreat?” said +Hal, smiling.</p> + +<p>“For myself, never!” replied the giant. “But there +are more lives than mine depending upon this. Therefore I say +retreat.”</p> + +<p>Alexis was as good as his word. Upon their return to the main +column, Alexis was called into consultation with the commanding +officer. He recounted what he had learned, and urged that the retreat +be begun at once.</p> + +<p>“There are half a million men in these hills,” he +informed his commander, “and they are trying to draw us on. We +will be allowed to go so far, and then they will close in on us. One +hundred or two hundred thousand, I don’t mind. We could whip them +with ease; but half a million are too many for sixty thousand. If we +had not outdistanced our infantry and artillery, we might do it, but +without them, no.”</p> + +<p>“Still,” said the commanding officer, “I have set +my heart on striking one more blow at the enemy. Would you counsel +against it?”</p> + +<p>“I am always in favor of striking one more blow at the +enemy,” replied Alexis. “I suppose I should counsel against +it, but I will not.”</p> + +<p>“Good!” exclaimed his commander. “One decisive +blow to the enemy in the hills, and then we shall fall back into +Galicia. Now, where are the Austrians massed?”</p> + +<p>“It will be extremely hazardous,” said Alexis slowly, +“but I guess it can be done. Fifteen miles straight along this +mountain pass you come to a small plateau. I advanced that far myself. +Encamped there are in the neighborhood of one hundred thousand of the +enemy. By a quick and silent dash and a night attack, we may be able to +deal them a crushing blow; but even so, we must fall back immediately. +Even then we shall be greatly harassed by the foe.”</p> + +<p>“Well,” said the commander, “we shall make the +attack, come what may afterward.”</p> + +<p>Alexis saluted his commander and returned to where he had left the +two lads, where he repeated his interview. Then he turned to +Chester.</p> + +<p>“It is too bad,” he said, “that you will be unable +to take part in the battle.”</p> + +<p>“But I shall take part in it,” exclaimed the lad. +“You don’t think I am going to sit idle while there is +fighting going on, do you?”</p> + +<p>“I am afraid you cannot help yourself,” replied Hal. +“You will go with the advance, of course; but you will be kept +well in the rear.”</p> + +<p>In vain did Chester protest. His commanding officer overruled all of +his complaints, and at last the lad was forced to make his way to the +rear of the Russian army. All that day the army rested, and it was not +until the following afternoon that the signal was given for the +advance, for the Russian commander had so timed his movement that he +would come upon the enemy after nightfall.</p> + +<p>It was indeed an imposing sight, these 60,000 men, able to march +scarcely six abreast through the narrow mountain pass, moving hurriedly +through the midst of the wild Carpathians. For miles they stretched +out, but they advanced rapidly, and long before night the advance guard +was within sight of the Austrian position.</p> + +<p>This was made known to the Russian commander by his scouts; and +still out of sight, the Cossacks halted.</p> + +<p>The pass was considerably wider here, and the men spread out +somewhat. Outposts were thrown out to guard against a counter surprise +attack, and the men allowed to lie down and rest.</p> + +<p>The battle formation was preserved, however, and the men fell to +sleep upon their arms, each and every one ready to spring up and dash +forward at a moment’s notice.</p> + +<p>And still the Austrians were unaware of their approach.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_24'></a>CHAPTER XXIV.<br /><span +class='fss'>THE SURPRISE.</span></h2> + +<p>Stealthily the vanguard of the Cossacks crept forward afoot. They +had dismounted that they might approach the enemy with less danger of +being heard. Naked blades were held firmly in their hands; revolvers +and hand grenades were ready. The night attack of the Cossacks was +under way.</p> + +<p>Not a shot had been fired. Silently they stole on toward the +sleeping Austrian camp. Feeling perfectly secure in the mountain +fastness and believing their position practically impregnable, the +Austrians failed to keep vigilant watch.</p> + +<p>Now the first line of Cossacks, at a whispered word of command, fell +to the ground on their faces. A sentry walked directly toward them, but +in the blackness of the night he did not make out the silent forms.</p> + +<p>As he turned his back on them, one shadowy form rose quickly to his +feet and moved swiftly forward. There was the sound of a brief +struggle, a cry stifled in his throat and the Cossacks moved forward +again.</p> + +<p>A second and then a third time this operation was repeated. Three +Austrian sentinels lay dead upon the ground; still the camp slept on, +unsuspecting.</p> + +<p>More swiftly now, other troops issued from the mountain pass and +spread out in a great semi-circle over the plateau. For two hours this +movement continued in the darkness. The first line of Cossacks stood +ready to fire at the first sign of discovery, but, undiscovered, waited +for the rest of the force to get in position.</p> + +<p>A dog in the Austrian camp barked. Others took up the cry. A sentry, +aware of some strange sensation, fired his rifle in the air. At the +moment the last of the Cossacks issued from the mountain pass. These +last troops were mounted and stood with bared lances awaiting the word +to charge.</p> + +<p>The huge Austrian camp stirred along its length, but at that instant +the Cossacks sprang to action. Came quick commands from the officers, +and the first line moved upon the Austrian camp at a dead run. A hail +of revolver bullets sped through the canvas of the tents, striking down +those who were yet asleep and reaping a toll of death among those who +were dashing to arms. Then the Cossacks charged with cold steel.</p> + +<p>In little parties, without the semblance of formation or discipline, +the Austrians dashed from their tents to beat back this sudden attack. +There was no time for them to fall into position. The Cossacks were +upon them. Right into the heart of the enemy’s camp rushed the +fearless horde in a terrible charge, cutting, slashing, hewing their +way through.</p> + +<p>The Austrians, caught unprepared, gave ground. The Cossacks followed +up their first advantage closely, pressing the enemy so that they had +no time to get into battle formation. A squad of Cossacks sprang toward +a battery of field pieces, quickly wheeled it into position, and opened +fire on the fleeing Austrians. The execution was fearful. Men went down +in heaps, and those that survived fled faster than before.</p> + +<p>The surprise was complete. A terrible confusion reigned among the +enemy. The Russians pursued them relentlessly. Here and there men threw +down their arms and surrendered by the hundreds.</p> + +<p>Other mountain batteries now had been seized by the Cossacks and +turned upon the foe. For a mile the Cossacks pursued the beaten enemy; +then drew off as suddenly as they had come. Prisoners were abandoned. +Quickly the big guns were put out of commission, and the advance +guard–now the rearguard–fell back slowly, protecting the +retreat of those in front.</p> + +<p>In almost less time than it takes to tell it, the Cossacks were +again in the saddle and dashing back down the mountain pass.</p> + +<p>The Austrians, for a moment, were unable to form in solid ranks. +But, at length, under the command of their officers, they formed and +gave chase. But the Cossacks had too great a start. The losses of the +Austrians had been terrible, those of the Cossacks comparatively +slight. In spite of the fact that they had been in the midst of the +fighting, Hal and Alexis had escaped without injury.</p> + +<p>Now the Austrian cavalry, having had time to form, scattered on each +side of the pass and rode after the Cossacks. They came up with the +rear guard, and from the sides poured in bullets, until they were +forced to draw rein because of the treacherous nature of the ground on +either hand. It was here that the Cossacks sustained their heaviest +losses.</p> + +<p>But the raid had been a success; there could be no doubt about +that.</p> + +<p>The Russian commander was elated as, in the midst of his men, he +ordered the retreat; but as the retreat continued, it became more +hazardous. Even as Alexis had predicted, the mountains swarmed with the +enemy, who rained bullets upon the Russian columns from every hand.</p> + +<p>In spite of this, however, by noon of the following day the Cossacks +had reached the spot from which they had started the day before; and +here a halt was called. Videttes were placed and the troops settled +down for a brief rest. While they made a good mark for the guerillas, +they nevertheless were in too great force to permit of an attack in +force.</p> + +<p>Night fell, and once more the troops sprang to the saddle and +continued their retreat. Morning found the vanguard well out of the +mountains on the plains of Galicia, and soon the last of the rear guard +had issued from the pass. Then the mighty columns spread out. There was +no pursuit, and the commander ordered the retreat conducted more +slowly.</p> + +<p>Two days later the columns of raiding Cossacks rode in among the +Russian troop besieging the Galician city of Cracow. Here the commander +decided to remain until he should receive instructions from the Grand +Duke. He dispatched Chester, who had now recovered sufficiently from +his wounds as to be feeling perfectly fit, Hal and Alexis to carry word +of the expedition to the Grand Duke. So the three friends again set out +upon a journey.</p> + +<p>They traveled without haste and without incident and at length found +themselves once more in Lodz. Here all three reported to the Russian +commander-in-chief. After receiving his congratulations, and while they +yet stood in his presence, there came a terrible roar from outside the +tent.</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke listened intently. Thousands upon thousands of voices +rose on the air. They were cheering. Thousands upon thousands of voices +took up the cry:</p> + +<p>“God save the Czar!”</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke advanced rapidly toward the entrance to his tent. The +two lads and the giant Cossack made as if to depart; but the Grand +Duke, with a movement of his hand, signified for them to stay and so +they remained.</p> + +<p>The sound of cheering drew nearer. The Grand Duke left the tent, and +through the door the lads could see him standing with bared head. Came +the sound of galloping hoofs, and a cavalry troop drew up at the Grand +Duke’s tent. The latter stepped forward, and giving his hand to a +brilliantly uniformed man, assisted him to dismount. Then, bowing low, +he escorted his visitor into his tent.</p> + +<p>As they appeared in the small enclosure Alexis fell upon his knee, +and bowed till his head all but touched the ground.</p> + +<p>Nicholas, the Czar of all the Russias, turned toward the three with +a question on his lips. But the Grand Duke spoke first:</p> + +<p>“These, sire, are three of your majesty’s bravest +soldiers, who have only now returned from a successful raid into the +heart of the Carpathians.”</p> + +<p>The Czar glanced at the two lads.</p> + +<p>“But these,” he said, pointing his finger at Hal and +Chester, “are not Russians.”</p> + +<p>“No, sire,” replied the Grand Duke. “They are +American lads; but they have rendered invaluable services to our +cause,” and while the lads stood listening, he gave the Czar a +brief account of some of their experiences.</p> + +<p>The Czar advanced and placed a hand upon the shoulder of each.</p> + +<p>“I am glad,” he said in perfect English, “to know +you; and I envy my cousin George the services of such gallant +youths.”</p> + +<p>Both lads bowed in acknowledgment of this compliment, and the Czar +turned to Alexis, who was still kneeling.</p> + +<p>“And this man,” he said, “surely he is one of my +Cossacks?”</p> + +<p>“Yes, your majesty,” replied the Grand Duke. +“There is not a braver in the whole army,” and he related +some of Alexis’ feats, as told him days before by Hal and +Chester.</p> + +<p>The Czar stretched forth a hand to Alexis, and the latter kissed +it.</p> + +<p>“You shall be remembered,” said the Russian monarch.</p> + +<p>Alexis’ face glowed with pleasure. He was so taken by surprise +that he was unable to speak.</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke now signified that the three might leave the tent, +and they accordingly bowed themselves out. Outside Alexis could +restrain himself no longer.</p> + +<p>“I told you I was a brave man!” he cried; “but I +am even braver than I thought. I have been addressed by the +Czar!”</p> + +<p>An officer entered the Grand Duke’s tent, and departed a +moment later in great haste. A second later and the shrill call of a +bugle carried through the town. It was the order for inspection. The +Czar was about to review his troops.</p> + +<p>An hour later Czar Nicholas stood before his army, or such a part of +it as could be crowded in the plain before the Grand Duke’s tent. +Far out it stretched on all sides. In a short address, in which he +praised his troops for their gallantry in action, the Czar predicted +that success would eventually crown the Russian arms. Then he turned to +an officer of the Grand Duke’s staff and gave a command.</p> + +<p>Immediately the latter approached Hal, Chester and Alexis, who, +being apart from their regiments, stood a little to one side watching +the ceremonies.</p> + +<p>“Follow me!” he commanded.</p> + +<p>Without a word the three obeyed. Straight to the Czar the officer +led the way, the two lads and the Cossack wondering what it was all +about. In front of the Russian monarch the officer withdrew, leaving +them alone before the Czar.</p> + +<p>The Russian ruler stepped between the three, with a smile on his +face drew something from his pocket, approached each in turn and pinned +something on his breast.</p> + +<p>Alexis, Hal and Chester let their eyes drop to these objects, and +all three cried out in surprise.</p> + +<p>For the Czar of Russia, there in the presence of the army of Poland, +before the Grand Duke and other Russian nobles and dignitaries, with +the eyes of the entire assemblage focused upon them, had pinned upon +the breasts of the two American lads and the giant Cossack the Cross of +the Order of St. George!</p> + +<p>It was their reward for bravery, and a great cheer went up from the +assembled hosts.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_25'></a>CHAPTER XXV.<br /><span +class='fss'>A NEW MISSION.</span></h2> + +<p>The two lads were again having an audience of the Grand Duke. The +latter, after ordering them to bear word to the commander of the +Cossack force that had invaded the Carpathians to remain before Cracow +until further notice, had also proposed a new mission to the lads.</p> + +<p>“I would like to learn,” he said, “whether there +is any truth in the report that, in the event we capture Cracow, the +population of Galicia will come to our support and throw off the +Austrian yoke. Of course I have heard these rumors from apparently +reliable sources, but I would prefer to know the truth from someone I +can trust implicitly.”</p> + +<p>“We shall be glad to undertake that mission, Your +Excellency,” said Hal. “I believe that by using a little +strategy we can gain entrance to the city. It would probably be easier +for us than for one of your own men, because we are Americans and may +be able to use that to advantage.”</p> + +<p>“I had thought of that,” replied the Grand Duke. +“In fact, it is for that reason that I selected you. I will give +you a message to your commander, relieving you from active duty. My +advice is that you do not take Alexis on this mission. He would +probably hinder you.”</p> + +<p>The boys saluted, and taking the paper the Grand Duke extended to +them, departed. On their way back toward Cracow they informed Alexis of +their mission and of the fact that he was not to accompany them. The +Cossack was disappointed and astonished.</p> + +<p>“Not take me!” he exclaimed in surprise. “Why, I +am good for fifty men! You know that!”</p> + +<p>“But this is not a case of strength and fighting,” Hal +explained. “This is a case where strategy will count more than a +hundred men.”</p> + +<p>“Well,” demanded Alexis, “am I not a strategist? +Did you not tell me so with your own lips? As a strategist there is +none better than I. Why, I can tell you how I―”</p> + +<p>“But, Alexis,” Hal interrupted, “one look at you +would tell an Austrian your nationality. You cannot expect to fool them +as we did the peasant of the hills. I am sorry, but there is no help +for it.”</p> + +<p>Alexis was greatly crestfallen, but he admitted the truth of the +boys’ reasoning.</p> + +<p>“It is true that anyone would know I am a Cossack,” he +replied, “but if it came to a fight―”</p> + +<p>“If it comes to a fight,” said Chester, “we shall +miss you greatly; but we shall have to try and get along without you +this time.”</p> + +<p>Back with their regiment they gave the message releasing them from +active duty to their commander; then, changing their uniforms for +civilian garb and bidding Alexis good-by, they set out in the direction +of the Galician stronghold, making a wide detour so as to approach from +the north, rather than from the direction of the Russian troops in the +East.</p> + +<p>They went horseback, and they rode slowly, for they did not wish to +attract undue attention to themselves by too great speed. The route +they traversed made it a good two-days’ journey, and long before +coming to the city proper they encountered bands of Austrian troops. To +these, however, they paid little heed and they were not molested.</p> + +<p>“Evidently they don’t care who goes in,” remarked +Chester.</p> + +<p>“Looks that way,” replied Hal; “but I’ll bet +they pay strict attention to anyone who tries to get out. That’s +where our hardest work probably will come in.”</p> + +<p>“I guess you are right,” said Chester.</p> + +<p>Nevertheless they were halted by an Austrian patrol when close to +the city. To him, however, they explained that they were American +tourists, caught in Galicia at the outbreak of the war, and that they +had penetrated beyond the Austrian lines without being aware of it.</p> + +<p>“We want to get back to safety,” Hal told him.</p> + +<p>The Austrian officer smiled and let them pass without further words. +Inside the Galician city the lads prowled about leisurely. The extreme +eastern end of the city was a mass of ruins. The shells hurled by the +big Russian guns had done great damage; but the flames had been +extinguished before they had reached the heart of the city, and as the +Russians had later fallen back a considerable distance the city now was +perfectly quiet.</p> + +<p>Night came on, and the lads sought shelter in the home of a Galician +peasant. The house was small but comfortable, and the old man who lived +in it admitted them without question. They repeated to him the story +told the Austrian officer, adding that the place in which they had been +staying had been destroyed by a Russian shell.</p> + +<p>“And your sympathies,” inquired the old man, “are +with the Austrians?”</p> + +<p>“Of course,” replied Hal quietly, “Russian +barbarism must be wiped out.”</p> + +<p>“Good!” replied the old man. “I suppose you know +there is considerable sentiment in favor of the Russians, +however?”</p> + +<p>“I have heard something to that effect; but I could scarcely +credit it,” replied Hal guardedly.</p> + +<p>“Well,” said the old man, “it is true. A plot was +discovered not two days ago to give the city into the hands of the +Russians. The conspirators were arrested right here in my house. They +were friends of mine. I was known to be loyal, and my false friends +took advantage of that fact to do their plotting here. Now my house is +watched closely, although they have hesitated to arrest me.”</p> + +<p>The old man made the two comfortable for the night and left them. +Before preparing for bed the lads talked over what the old man had told +them. As they were getting ready to retire, they heard voices from an +adjoining room.</p> + +<p>Through a little hole in the wall they could see a stream of light. +Hal put his eye to the hole. In the room beyond he made out the figures +of two Austrian officers. Then the lad motioned to Chester to remain +silent, and laid his ear to the hole.</p> + +<p>“You are sure of this other plot?” came a voice.</p> + +<p>“Perfectly; but we will nip it in the bud. There is no +question but the people would welcome a Russian investment of the city. +Galicia is practically in sympathy with the Russians. We have been hard +put to it to keep them from rising and turning the city over to the +Czar’s troops.”</p> + +<p>“Well, I am sure we are equal to any occasion,” said the +first speaker.</p> + +<p>Hal turned away from the wall and repeated the conversation to +Chester.</p> + +<p>“I guess that’s all we need to know,” he +added.</p> + +<p>“I should say it is,” was the reply. “Now the +question is, how are we to get back to our own lines?”</p> + +<p>“I have a plan that may work,” said Hal. “It came +to me a moment ago.”</p> + +<p>“And that is?” prompted Chester.</p> + +<p>“Well,” said Hal quietly, “we will exchange +clothes with those two officers in the next room.”</p> + +<p>“Good!” cried Chester.</p> + +<p>“Let’s start then.”</p> + +<p>“Hadn’t we better wait until they are asleep?”</p> + +<p>“No; I believe I have a better plan. Come with me.”</p> + +<p>Quietly the two lads slipped from the room and down the little hall. +Then they turned and made their way back again, coming only as far as +the door to the Austrians’ room. Hal opened it and walked in. At +sight of the two Austrian officers he drew back in well-simulated +surprise.</p> + +<p>“I beg your pardon,” he exclaimed. “I am in the +wrong room.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, that’s all right,” laughed one of the +Austrians. “Are you the Americans who are stopping +here?”</p> + +<p>“Yes,” replied Hal.</p> + +<p>“Well,” said the Austrian. “It’s early yet; +come in and have a chat with us. You can perhaps tell us some things +about America that we would like to know.”</p> + +<p>Hal accepted the invitation, mentally congratulating himself upon +their good fortune. After a lengthy conversation, Hal rose to go.</p> + +<p>“It’s getting late,” he said. “Come, +Chester, we may as well turn in.”</p> + +<p>Chester also rose. In going to the door it was necessary for Hal to +pass behind one of the Austrians. As he did so, he quickly threw out a +hand and clutched the man by the throat. At the same moment Chester +sprang upon the second unsuspecting officer, and the cry that the +latter would have let out was stifled in his throat by the pressure of +the lad’s fingers.</p> + +<p>Hal now produced a revolver, and Chester did likewise. They covered +the two officers.</p> + +<p>“One outcry and you are dead men,” said Hal calmly.</p> + +<p>While Chester kept them covered, Hal bound and gagged them. Then the +two lads stripped them of their uniforms, which they donned themselves. +Feeling perfectly secure in these, the lads saw that the prisoners were +well tied and unable to cry out, and then left the room, shutting the +door behind them.</p> + +<p>In the hall they encountered their host, but the latter, recognizing +the Austrian uniform, did not even speak to them. The lads left the +house quietly, and turned their faces toward the north, intending to go +back by the way they had come.</p> + +<p>Several times they were spoken to by Austrian officers as they +walked along the streets, but to these salutations they made no reply, +trusting that their apparent rudeness would cast no suspicion upon +them. And it did not.</p> + +<p>At length they came to the farthest Austrian outpost, and here, for +the first time they were challenged. Hal stepped a little ahead of +Chester and spoke.</p> + +<p>“We are inspecting the lines,” he said calmly.</p> + +<p>“You cannot pass here,” came the reply. “My orders +are to shoot anyone who attempts to get by. The general himself +couldn’t pass. You will have to go back.”</p> + +<p>“Oh, all right, if that’s the way you feel about +it,” said Hal, turning his back upon the sentry.</p> + +<p>The sentry, believing that the lads would go away, lowered his +rifle, and in that moment Hal turned quickly again and sprang upon him. +A quick blow knocked the sentry from his feet, and the lads dashed +forward. In the distance Hal made out the form of several horses, and +the lads ran toward them.</p> + +<p>“Quick, Chester!” cried Hal.</p> + +<p>But the Austrian sentry had not been knocked unconscious. He was +only stunned. He staggered to his feet, brought his rifle to his +shoulder and fired. He was too unsteady to aim carefully, however, and +the lads were unhurt.</p> + +<p>But the sound of the shot aroused the Austrian camp. Men came +rushing forward.</p> + +<p>The boys leaped to the backs of two horses and spurred on.</p> + +<p>“It’s a race for life, Hal!” shouted Chester, as +the horses dashed ahead.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_26'></a>CHAPTER XXVI.<br /><span +class='fss'>A DASH FOR LIFE.</span></h2> + +<p>One glance over his shoulder convinced Hal that at least half a +dozen of the enemy had mounted and were spurring forward in pursuit. He +passed the word to Chester, and bending low in their saddles, the lads +urged their horses to greater efforts.</p> + +<p>From ahead suddenly came a body of horsemen. Before they realized +it, the lads were dashing by these at a distance of less than a hundred +yards. Here the Austrian uniforms stood them in good stead. The officer +hesitated to give a command to his men to fire on what were apparently +Austrian officers, and before he was made aware of the situation by +shouts from behind, the lads had placed considerable distance between +themselves and these new enemies.</p> + +<p>Now the latter also turned and gave chase.</p> + +<p>After some minutes the lads realized that they were easily +maintaining their lead and breathed easier.</p> + +<p>“We’ll get away yet if our horses don’t give +out!” shouted Chester.</p> + +<p>“All right!” Hal shouted back. “Keep up the +pace!”</p> + +<p>In their haste in seizing upon two horses, the lads had not had time +to look the animals over and it soon developed that they had made a bad +choice. The animals which the boys bestrode had returned only an hour +before from a long and tedious journey, and consequently were almost +exhausted. Under the spur they put forth their best efforts, but +finally they began to tire, and despite the urging of the lads, +faltered in their stride.</p> + +<p>Hal was the first to notice this.</p> + +<p>“I am afraid it is all up!” he shouted to Chester.</p> + +<p>Right in the face of his oncoming enemies he drew rein. Chester +followed his example, and then both lads quickly dismounted.</p> + +<p>At this spot there was a small clump of trees. Slapping their horses +across the flanks with their hats, the lads plunged in among the +foliage while the tired horses made off slowly.</p> + +<p>“Up into these trees quick,” shouted Chester. “It +has saved us before; it may again!”</p> + +<p>Quickly the lads clambered up among the branches, where they lay +perfectly still. The sound of the approaching Austrians grew nearer, +and at last half a dozen of the enemy pulled up their mounts almost +under the lads’ hiding place.</p> + +<p>“Which way did they go?” asked a voice.</p> + +<p>“They have probably made off through the woods,” said a +second. “We’ll have to search for them.”</p> + +<p>The tree in which the lads were hiding was the largest nearby. Up in +its dense foliage the boys were absolutely hidden from the ground +below. One of the Austrians glanced up into the tree.</p> + +<p>“They may be hiding up here,” he said to his +companions.</p> + +<p>“Hardly likely,” replied a second.</p> + +<p>“Well, I’ll send up a couple of shots and see,” +said the first speaker.</p> + +<p>His rifle spoke sharply twice. Hal felt a slight stinging sensation +in his left arm. One of the bullets, as it passed, brushed his skin. +The other sang close to Chester’s head. But in spite of this, and +in spite of the fact that another shot from below might end one of +their lives, neither boy so much as shifted his position.</p> + +<p>After firing the shot into the tree the Austrian became still, +listening, as did his companions. There was no sound.</p> + +<p>“They can’t be up there,” said a voice. “If +they were, and even had not been hit, they couldn’t remain +still.”</p> + +<p>“You are right,” said another voice. “We shall +have to look for them elsewhere. Scatter out, men, and we’ll +search the woods.”</p> + +<p>The Austrians moved from beneath the tree. Waiting until he was sure +that they had gone, Chester whispered to Hal:</p> + +<p>“What shall we do now?”</p> + +<p>“If possible,” replied Hal, “we shall slip down +and try to pick out a couple of fresh horses. Then we can make another +dash for it.”</p> + +<p>“All right,” agreed Chester, “but we had better +wait here until we can get down the tree unseen.”</p> + +<p>Hal nodded in assent, and for perhaps half an hour the lads waited +silently. In the distance they could hear the enemy beating up the +bushes for some trace of them, but these sounds gradually grew farther +away; then died down altogether.</p> + +<p>Cautiously Hal peered down from his hiding place. There was no sign +of an enemy. The lad dropped quickly to the ground, and Chester +followed suit a moment later. Then they dashed silently toward the +road.</p> + +<p>Upon entering the woods in pursuit of the fugitives, the Austrians +had abandoned their horses and were searching afoot. Approaching the +edge of the forest, the lads saw six horses tied to trees. They ran +rapidly toward them. As they did so a single Austrian, who had been +left to guard the animals, stepped suddenly forward, raised his rifle +and cried: “Halt!”</p> + +<p>There was no time for either lad to draw his revolver. +Chester’s hand went to his pocket, even as he ran, but he did not +wait to extract the weapon. With his hand still in his pocket, he +pointed the muzzle of his revolver at the Austrian and pressed the +trigger. The bullet sped true through the cloth, and the Austrian +dropped his rifle and toppled over to the ground.</p> + +<p>“Good work, Chester!” shouted Hal, not pausing in his +stride toward the horses.</p> + +<p>He had all six horses untied in a jiffy, and passing the bridle of +one to his chum, leaped lightly into the saddle. Chester did likewise. +The other horses stood still.</p> + +<p>“No use leaving them here for the enemy to pursue us +with,” decided Chester.</p> + +<p>He rode his own horse among the others, and with several quick blows +of his cap, started them on ahead of them.</p> + +<p>At that moment, the Austrians who had been scouring the woods for +the fugitives, attracted by the sound of the shot, came into sight and +dashed toward the lads, their revolvers spitting fire as they ran.</p> + +<p>“Come on!” cried Hal to Chester.</p> + +<p>It was no time to hesitate, nor to fight back while there was a +chance of getting away. Putting spurs to their horses both lads were +soon out of range.</p> + +<p>“Now,” said Chester, “we shall have to keep a +sharp lookout for other Austrians in front; for it is certain all of +our pursuers didn’t enter the woods after us.”</p> + +<p>“Right you are,” replied Hal.</p> + +<p>They rode forward at a quick trot, and soon were out of sight of the +enemy behind. For perhaps fifteen minutes they continued on their way +without interruption, and then a band of horsemen bore down on +them.</p> + +<p>“Austrians,” said Chester briefly. “What shall we +do?”</p> + +<p>“Go straight ahead,” replied Hal quickly. “Perhaps +they will not recognize us. We still have our Austrian uniforms. It may +be they will take us for some of the searching party.”</p> + +<p>They drew nearer the approaching horsemen. The latter reined in +their mounts.</p> + +<p>“Did you find them?” Hal called out.</p> + +<p>“No,” came back the reply; “did you?”</p> + +<p>“No,” said Hal, “they must have given us the +slip.”</p> + +<p>The horsemen came closer and Hal and Chester kept their faces +averted as much as possible, for they knew that a close scrutiny would +betray their identity.</p> + +<p>“Well,” shouted Hal, “we will look a little +farther on. You search the woods. Perhaps your eyes may be better than +ours.”</p> + +<p>“All right,” was the reply, and the boys rode on slowly +so as to give their mounts a rest. Some moments later there was a great +commotion behind, and turning in their saddles, the lads saw the +Austrians coming rapidly after them. They had come upon the little +party who had seen the lads leaving the woods.</p> + +<p>With a cry to Chester, Hal put spurs to his horse and soon both were +literally flying over the ground, the Austrians in full chase.</p> + +<p>But the horses that the boys now bestrode were much fresher than had +been their first mounts; still, Hal saw that several of the Austrians +were gaining.</p> + +<p>Now one of the enemy drew well ahead of his companions, a bit behind +came a second, while a third, who was some distance ahead of the +remainder, closely followed the second. These three, at their +respective distances, slowly drew closer to the lads.</p> + +<p>Suddenly, without a word to Hal, Chester checked his horse abruptly, +and his revolver flashed in his hand. Before the first Austrian could +check his mount, he had come within range of the lad’s weapon, +which spoke sharply. The Austrian tumbled sidewise from his horse.</p> + +<p>Chester turned and spurred on after Hal.</p> + +<p>Now the second Austrian drew close upon the lad. Once more the +latter abruptly checked his horse and turned to face the Austrian. The +latter, perceiving the boy’s maneuver, also drew rein. But he was +not quick enough, and a second bullet from Chester’s revolver +laid him low. Once more the lad turned his horse’s head forward +and dashed on.</p> + +<p>The third Austrian, unmindful of the fate that had overtaken his two +companions, still dashed after the lads. He gained steadily, and was +now a considerable distance ahead of the main body of the enemy. A +third time Chester turned suddenly on the foe and a third time his +revolver spoke. He missed, and the Austrian opened with his own +revolver. But his aim was no better.</p> + +<p>Chester, sitting quietly on his horse, then took careful and +deliberate aim and at his next shot, the Austrian fell to the ground. +Then he turned and rode on after Hal, who had slowed down to wait for +him.</p> + +<p>Once more the lads put spurs to their horses and dashed +on–each forward stride of their animals taking them much nearer +the Russian lines and safety–until at last they made out in the +distance the outposts of the Russian camp.</p> + +<p>Hal raised a cry of triumph, but at the same moment his horse +stepped into a hole and went to his knees, hurling Hal over his +head.</p> + +<p>Chester reined in alongside his friend and leaped to the ground. The +Austrians, perceiving the lad’s misfortune, bore down on them +with a wild cry of joy.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_27'></a>CHAPTER XXVII.<br /><span +class='fss'>SAFE.</span></h2> + +<p>In spite of his tumble, Hal was uninjured and sprang quickly to his +feet. Chester turned to the prostrate horse, and attempted to get it to +its feet. The horse moaned with pain, and Chester gave up the attempt, +for he realized in an instant that the animal had broken its leg in the +fall.</p> + +<p>With revolvers in hands, both lads turned to face their foes.</p> + +<p>“We won’t give up without a fight!” declared Hal +grimly.</p> + +<p>“No, we won’t give up without a fight!” Chester +agreed.</p> + +<p>Standing behind the horse that was still on its feet the two lads +pointed their weapons at the foe, who bore down upon them at top speed. +There were at least a score of them, and the boys realized that the +encounter could have but one end. Still they were determined to fight +it out.</p> + +<p>But now, from the rear, came a fierce yell. Turning their eyes +momentarily in that direction, the lads beheld a welcome sight. Mounted +on their superb chargers and galloping forward as swiftly as the wind, +came a full squadron of Russian Cossacks; and as they came on, with +loose-hanging reins, waving their weapons in the air, the fierce +Cossack yell split the air time after time.</p> + +<p>The Austrians hesitated; then, not mindful to retreat and allow +their victims, whom they had followed so far, to escape scot-free they +advanced on the lads again. Chester calmly picked off the first man on +the right, and Hal disposed of the first man on the left. Realizing +that assistance was on the way, the boys fought coolly and with +determination, keeping the rearing and plunging horse always between +them and their foes.</p> + +<p>But this protection was soon removed. An Austrian bullet struck the +horse in the head and he fell to the ground. Quickly the lads dropped +behind the prostrate body and continued to pop away at their enemies. +Two more went down, and still the lads were uninjured. The Cossacks +were still some distance away, although approaching with the swiftness +of the wind. The Austrians, seeking to end the encounter, spread out, +fan-wise, and drew in upon the lads from three sides. The lads shifted +their positions so as still to face all their foes. Then the Austrians +came forward on a charge.</p> + +<p>But they had delayed too long, for now the onrushing Cossacks had +come within range, and a powerful voice rang out:</p> + +<p>“Faster!”</p> + +<p>In response to this command, the gallant chargers of the Cossacks +leaped forward. A volley rang out, and bullets whistling over the heads +of Hal and Chester found lodgment in Austrian breasts and heads. The +enemy turned and fled.</p> + +<p>With a quick word of command to his men the Cossack captain, now +close to the kneeling lads, pulled in his horse with a sudden movement +and sprang to the ground. The rest of the troop continued its mad dash +after the Austrians, who were fleeing as fast as their tired horses +could carry them.</p> + +<p>There was but one possible result of such a chase. Noble animals, +though the Austrian horses were, they were no match, at their best, for +the Cossack chargers. And there was no mercy in the hearts of the +Cossacks for their enemies. The Austrians did not cry for quarter, and +no quarter was given. Ten minutes later the Cossacks, their ranks +thinned by four, returned to where their leader had dismounted beside +the lads.</p> + +<p>As the Cossack commander flung himself to the ground by their side, +both lads gave a cry of glad surprise.</p> + +<p>“Alexis!” they exclaimed in a single voice.</p> + +<p>“The same!” replied their Cossack friend. +“Don’t tell me any more about your strategy. Where would +you have been, if I hadn’t arrived just now, eh?”</p> + +<p>“Well,” said Chester slowly, “we wouldn’t be +here.”</p> + +<p>“You would have been dead, that’s where you would have +been,” said Alexis calmly. “As it was, I almost arrived too +late. Perhaps next time you will not leave me behind.”</p> + +<p>“We won’t try to thank you,” said Hal. “But +how did you happen to arrive so opportunely?”</p> + +<p>“Why,” replied Alexis, “looking across the plain I +saw two horsemen pursued by many others. I knew you would return from +that direction, and I surmised who it was. But here is one case where +my keen eyesight almost worked to your disadvantage. I made out your +Austrian uniforms, even as I would have ordered my men forward, and +hesitated. It wasn’t any of my business if two Austrians were +killed. Then I remembered your talk of strategy, and guessed that maybe +the uniforms were part of it. But, you may take my word for it, you +almost used too much strategy.”</p> + +<p>Alexis now ordered one of his men to secure two of the riderless +horses, and, mounting, the lads rode back toward the Russian lines with +the Cossack troop. Here they wasted no time, but started at once on +their return journey to Lodz, Alexis, having obtained permission from +his superior officer, going with them.</p> + +<p>Grand Duke Nicholas was well pleased with the lads’ report and +complimented them highly upon their bravery and resourcefulness. Then +he added, somewhat sorrowfully, the lads thought:</p> + +<p>“I shall indeed be sorry to lose you.”</p> + +<p>“To lose us!” exclaimed Chester, in surprise. +“Why, Your Excellency, we have no intention of being +killed.”</p> + +<p>“I didn’t mean that,” replied the Grand Duke, with +a slight smile, “but I have other work of importance for you. In +fact, I may say of greater importance than any which you have yet +accomplished.”</p> + +<p>“And we shall be glad to undertake it, no matter what it +is,” said Hal. “I am sure we can carry it through +successfully.”</p> + +<p>“So am I,” replied the Grand Duke dryly. “After +some of the things you have done, I would not say there is anything you +cannot do.”</p> + +<p>“But this new mission?” questioned Hal.</p> + +<p>“The new mission,” replied the Grand Duke, “will +carry you back into France.”</p> + +<p>“What!” exclaimed both lads in surprise.</p> + +<p>“Exactly,” said the Grand Duke. “That is why I +said I would be sorry to lose you, for I know that, once back with the +British troops, you will not return again to Russia.”</p> + +<p>“Well, Your Excellency,” said Chester, “we have +seen service with the Cossacks, and we like it immensely, +but―”</p> + +<p>“But,” interrupted the Grand Duke, “you would much +prefer to be fighting with the English, your own people, or a kindred +people, at least. Is that it?”</p> + +<p>Both lads bowed in assent.</p> + +<p>“It is, Your Excellency,” replied Hal.</p> + +<p>“Well,” said the Grand Duke, “so be it.”</p> + +<p>He drew from his pocket a document, which he placed in Hal’s +hands.</p> + +<p>“This,” he said, “you will place in the hands of +either Sir John French, the British commander, or General Joffre, the +French commander-in-chief. I could, of course, send the message by +wireless to London, but it would be intercepted by the Germans, and, +while it naturally would be sent in code, I am not at all sure that the +Germans could not decipher it.”</p> + +<p>“When shall we start, Your Excellency?” asked +Chester.</p> + +<p>“Whenever it is convenient,” was the reply. “And +the manner of your going I leave entirely to you. I will not hamper you +with instructions.”</p> + +<p>“Your Excellency,” said Hal, struck with a sudden +thought.</p> + +<p>“Yes?”</p> + +<p>“I should like to make a request.”</p> + +<p>“Consider it granted,” said the Grand Duke.</p> + +<p>“Well, then,” said Hal, “I should like to ask +permission to take Alexis with us.”</p> + +<p>The Grand Duke was plainly surprised.</p> + +<p>“He may be of great aid to us in getting through,” Hal +explained. “His strength is prodigious, and more than once, as I +have told you, has stood us in good stead.”</p> + +<p>“Well,” said the Grand Duke thoughtfully, “I will +not order him to accompany you, for he would be out of his element on +the other side; but, if he is willing to go, he has my +permission.”</p> + +<p>After some further talk the boys took a friendly farewell of the +commander-in-chief of the Russian armies and left the tent. They hunted +up Alexis immediately.</p> + +<p>“Well, Alexis,” said Hal, “to-morrow we start back +for France!”</p> + +<p>The giant Cossack was on his feet in a moment.</p> + +<p>“You mean you are going away for good?” he asked.</p> + +<p>“Yes,” replied Chester.</p> + +<p>Alexis, although not an emotional man, was stirred deeply. The boys +realized it in an instant; but he was not the man to give way to his +feelings, and he said simply:</p> + +<p>“I am sorry. I wish that you would remain here.”</p> + +<p>Then Hal broached his plan.</p> + +<p>“Alexis,” he said, “how would you like to come +with us?”</p> + +<p>The giant looked at him in surprise.</p> + +<p>“Go with you?” he exclaimed. “To +France?”</p> + +<p>“Yes.”</p> + +<p>“But what would I do in France?” he questioned.</p> + +<p>“Fight!” replied Chester briefly.</p> + +<p>“True!” muttered Alexis.</p> + +<p>“The Grand Duke has given his permission, if you desire to +go,” said Hal, “and we would indeed be glad to have you. We +have grown very fond of you.”</p> + +<p>“And I of you,” replied Alexis.</p> + +<p>“In France,” said Chester, “there are no such men +as you. You would be a veritable Hercules, a man among men. Brave men +there are there in plenty, but none such as you.”</p> + +<p>His vanity thus appealed to, Alexis saw the matter in a different +light. He slapped one great fist down upon the table in a mighty +blow.</p> + +<p>“I’ll go!” he shouted.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_28'></a>CHAPTER XXVIII.<br /><span +class='fss'>ON NEUTRAL SOIL.</span></h2> + +<p>“Surely you are not afraid, Alexis?” exclaimed +Chester.</p> + +<p>“Afraid!” shouted Alexis. “Of course I am not +afraid. But”–he eyed the large aëroplane +dubiously–“but a man was not made to fly about in the air +like a bird, particularly a man of my weight. Besides, I do not like +great height. If I stand upon a precipice, I am immediately struck with +the notion that I must jump off. If I jumped from an aëroplane I might +upset it.”</p> + +<p>Both Hal and Chester laughed.</p> + +<p>“I was that way myself once,” said Chester, “so I +know just how you feel. Many a man, otherwise very brave, has that same +horror of height. However, you will soon get used to it.”</p> + +<p>“Maybe so,” said Alexis dubiously. “However, if +one man can fly, why, so can I. I am willing to take a +chance.”</p> + +<p>“Good!” exclaimed Hal. “Now to get +started.”</p> + +<p>Leaving Lodz, the three had made their way north, keeping as close +to the German border as was safe, until they had reached Riga, on the +Gulf of Riga, which extends in from the Baltic Sea. Here they had at +first thought of going part of the distance by boat, but, because of +the likelihood of the approach of German warships in the Baltic, had +given up this plan and decided upon an aëroplane.</p> + +<p>“We came to Russia in an airship,” Hal had said. +“We might as well go back in one. Besides, it is +quicker.”</p> + +<p>And so it was agreed.</p> + +<p>Ten miles south of Riga, surrounded by Russian airmen, they climbed +into the craft which the Russian commander in the little city had +provided for them. The plane was large and roomy, having a seating +capacity of five.</p> + +<p>Hal took his place at the steering wheel and Chester climbed +aboard.</p> + +<p>Still eyeing the flying craft suspiciously, Alexis followed Chester, +and, sitting down suddenly, took hold of the seat with both hands and +hung on for dear life, although the craft was still upon the ground. +Then he lowered his head and shut his eyes.</p> + +<p>Hal gave the word, and willing hands started the machine along the +ground. Gradually it gained momentum until it was skimming over the +ground at a rapid gait. Then Hal threw over the elevating lever, and +the machine shot into the air amid the cheers of the Russians +below.</p> + +<p>Alexis was conscious of a sinking sensation in the region of his +stomach, and he ducked his head even lower as the car rose higher in +the air.</p> + +<p>“Look up, Alexis!” shouted Chester, reaching over and +laying a hand on the Cossack’s arm.</p> + +<p>Now that the machine had reached a good height, Hal held it steady, +and it darted ahead on a straightaway course. The plane shook with the +vibrations of the engine, but otherwise there was scarcely a noticeable +motion.</p> + +<p>Now that the machine was more steady, Alexis, in response to +Chester’s command, slowly opened his eyes and looked about. +Seeing nothing, he closed them again immediately, and again ducked his +head. Once more Chester yelled at him to look about, and at last Alexis +raised his head and glanced into the distance.</p> + +<p>“This is a terrible place for a man to be,” he muttered +with a shudder. “If man were meant to fly he would have been +given wings. It is tempting the wrath of the elements to be +here.”</p> + +<p>As he looked about him, however, and became conscious of the +steadiness of the craft, his composure returned, and soon he was making +inquiries regarding the construction of the craft, its speed and the +height to which it could ascend. He glanced over the side of the +machine, and then looked quickly upward again. The one glance below had +made him ill.</p> + +<p>He smiled faintly. “I can’t look down yet,” he +said ruefully. “I suppose I’ll get used to it in time; but +now I had better keep my eyes inside.”</p> + +<p>“How fast are we going, Hal?” asked Chester.</p> + +<p>“Sixty-five miles an hour,” was Hal’s reply.</p> + +<p>Alexis was astonished.</p> + +<p>“Sixty-five miles!” he ejaculated. “Why, it seems +as if we were standing still.”</p> + +<p>“If we were close enough to the earth you would soon notice +the difference,” said Chester.</p> + +<p>For another hour they continued on their way without incident, and +then Chester discovered the dim outline of a second aircraft trailing +them at a distance. It was not gaining, but even when Hal put on more +speed, at a word from Chester, he was unable to shake it off.</p> + +<p>“Evidently a German,” said Chester. “I suppose he +wants to see where we are going.”</p> + +<p>For another hour the plane pursued them. Then Chester perceived that +there were two instead of one, and that both were creeping up on +them.</p> + +<p>With a cry to Hal, Chester picked two rifles from the bottom of the +car.</p> + +<p>“We’ll have to fight them off!” he cried.</p> + +<p>Alexis stirred uneasily in his seat.</p> + +<p>“I was afraid of it,” he muttered. “Now, what will +happen to me when I go hurtling through space to the ground +below?”</p> + +<p>He shuddered.</p> + +<p>Hal, in response to a command from Chester, slowed down suddenly. +Taking careful aim at one of the pursuers, Chester emptied the magazine +of his first rifle. There came from behind the sounds of screams, +followed by an explosion.</p> + +<p>“What was that?” cried Alexis in alarm.</p> + +<p>“I got one of them!” replied Chester calmly. “The +plane has gone to earth.”</p> + +<p>The second pursuing plane reduced its speed, but still clung on the +trail of its would-be prey.</p> + +<p>“We’ll have to dispose of it some way, Hal,” +shouted Chester. “Turn quickly and run toward it, and I’ll +see if I can’t send it to the ground.”</p> + +<p>He held his rifle ready as he spoke. Reducing the speed of the craft +a trifle, Hal brought its head about in a wide circle; then darted +suddenly toward the enemy.</p> + +<p>But the latter was not caught unprepared, and a rifle bullet +whistled close to Alexis’ ear.</p> + +<p>The giant Cossack clapped a hand to his head and for the first time +looked toward the enemy. Then, reaching to the bottom of the machine, +he raised up with a weapon, and, aiming at the hull of the enemy in the +distance, poured the entire contents of the magazine into it. At the +same moment a well-directed shot from Chester’s rifle struck the +pilot. He sprang to his feet, spun around crazily, and plunged from the +car. A moment later and the aëroplane blew up with a loud bang.</p> + +<p>Alexis, who had seen the pilot go overboard, let out a cry of +dismay. He could not help but think of the terrible fall to the +ground.</p> + +<p>“Good work, Alexis!” cried Chester. “I told you +you would get used to it before long.”</p> + +<p>“I am not used to it,” replied the giant, “but +when a bullet whistles past my ear I get mad. I just naturally have to +fight back.”</p> + +<p>Nevertheless he made a brave effort to appear unconcerned, and he +took a look over the side. At that moment Hal allowed the car to glide +slowly nearer the earth. For a moment Alexis was unaware of this +sinking sensation; but suddenly treetops came into view, and the +Cossack let out a cry of alarm:</p> + +<p>“We’re sinking!” he exclaimed.</p> + +<p>Hal laughed.</p> + +<p>“Just coming down to get a look about,” he replied. +“Now, if you will look over at the earth a few moments, you will +soon overcome your uneasiness.”</p> + +<p>Alexis, taking a long breath, did so; and he continued to peer over +the side, even after Hal, touching the elevating lever, sent the plane +high in the air again.</p> + +<p>Darkness fell and still the ’plane sped on. Then, so suddenly +that they seemed to spring up from nowhere, the swiftly moving +aëroplane was surrounded on all sides–as it seemed to the +voyagers–by a score of hostile aircraft, while shots rang out +from several sides.</p> + +<p>Hal acted promptly, as had always been his wont. He allowed the +’plane to drop a good quarter of a mile with a sudden lurch, and +then righting it, darted forward again. For a moment they had shaken +off the foe, but the latter was not long in finding them. Searchlights +flashed in the sky, seeking out the prey.</p> + +<p>By a series of clever maneuvers, Hal succeeded in evading the +hostile craft during the long hours of the night, turning first this +way and then that, rising and falling. But with the first gray of dawn, +it became plain to both boys that escape was practically impossible. +Looking down Hal saw water below him, and at the same moment the +hostile air fleet ten ’planes strong, swooped down on them.</p> + +<p>Chester’s rifle cracked, as did that of Alexis. Bullets flew +about all three occupants of the machine, and then the craft, struck in +a vital spot, staggered. The ’plane began to sink slowly. In vain +did Hal try to check the descent. The machine, still heading slightly +toward the north, glided toward the water below.</p> + +<p>Suddenly Hal made out something below besides water. It was land. +The lad breathed easier, for it was plain, that at the rate at which +the craft was sinking, it could clear the water by a good quarter of a +mile, beyond which the lad could see a sandy coast.</p> + +<p>“It must be the coast of Sweden or Denmark,” he said to +himself, “in which event we are safe, for it is neutral +ground.”</p> + +<p>The Germans, realizing that their foe was sinking, did not waste +another shot on it, but swarmed after. Now the craft was close to the +water. Gently it skimmed over it, across a short stretch of sand, and +then settled slowly to the ground.</p> + +<p>Hal and Chester glanced about. There was no one in sight on the +sandy beach and the Germans were coming right after them.</p> + +<p>“Even though this be Sweden,” said Hal, “unless +Swedish troops come to our aid, the Germans are likely to violate the +neutrality of the country and take us anyhow.”</p> + +<p>“Not without a fight,” declared Alexis. “Let me +get my feet on the ground again, and I will show you such a fight as +you never saw. On the ground I can fight.”</p> + +<p>Now the ’plane was but a few scant yards from the earth. It +grounded with a shock.</p> + +<hr class='pb' /> <h2><a id='link_29'></a>CHAPTER XXIX.<br /><span +class='fss'>THE DEATH OF A TITAN.</span></h2> + +<p>Quickly the three leaped out. In spite of the Germans hovering +overhead, Hal examined the ’plane.</p> + +<p>“Great Scott!” he exclaimed, after a quick, though +careful, inspection. “I can fix this thing in five +minutes.”</p> + +<p>Now the German machines came to the ground a short distance away. +From each craft leaped three men, who dashed toward the three +friends.</p> + +<p>Alexis turned to Hal and Chester.</p> + +<p>“Do you,” he said calmly, “fix up the airship. I +will meet these fellows!”</p> + +<p>Before either lad could reply, he had hurled himself upon the +foe.</p> + +<p>For some reason, probably because they did not wish to attract the +attention of the Swedish authorities by the sounds of a struggle, the +Germans, at first, drew no firearms. Perceiving but one form rushing +toward them, they advanced to meet him confidently. Plainly they +considered it the wild dash of a madman.</p> + +<p>Hal and Chester turned their attention to the aëroplane, and while +Alexis fought against overwhelming numbers, they overhauled it +carefully.</p> + +<p>Right into the midst of his foes rushed the giant. Such a superb +attack was never seen before–such a mad wild dash as he took the +enemy by surprise and hurled them back–all of them–back +against the airships that stood on the sands.</p> + +<p>As the huge Cossack rushed forward, his sword flashed above his +head. His revolver he gripped tightly by the barrel. A fighting fire +darted from his eye, and his thin lips were bared in a slight +smile.</p> + +<p>If ever a man felt the joy of battle it was he. He heeded not the +number of his adversaries nor the steel that flashed forth against him. +Slashing, cutting, parrying, thrusting, he hurled himself in upon them. +They were carried back by the very fierceness of his attack. They gave +way before him, parting to retreat around one of the aircraft. With one +swift sweep of his foot, Alexis tore a ragged hole in the bottom of the +first craft; and at the same instant two men fell beneath his slashing +blows.</p> + +<p>They could not stand before him–their very numbers were +against them as the giant pressed ever forward. Now a man dropped to +the ground and seized the giant by the left leg, thinking to drag him +down. Alexis drove his right boot into the man’s face, and at the +same moment, by a quick back-handed sweep of his sword, cut down a man +who would have sprung upon his back.</p> + +<p>His revolver rose and fell, once, twice, three times, and beneath +these crushing blows more Germans went down. But Alexis did not escape +unscathed. A sword thrust had pierced his chest, not deeply, but the +blood streamed forth. There was a gaping wound in his cheek; his +clothing was pierced in a dozen places.</p> + +<p>But in spite of this he pressed on. He thought only of advance, +never of retreat; and as he hurled his gigantic body, time after time, +upon the overwhelming number of his foes, they gave back in +consternation and astonishment.</p> + +<p>Ten men lay dead upon the ground, their skulls battered by fierce +blows of the revolver, or pierced through and through by the great +sword.</p> + +<p>And now Hal and Chester, the aëroplane once more ready for flight, +dashed forward to the rescue with loud cries.</p> + +<p>They ranged themselves alongside the fighting Cossack. He greeted +them with a half-smile; he had no time for more. Three men threw +themselves upon him. One he hurled from him with a stroke of his mighty +leg, another felt the weight of his revolver butt and the third fell +back with a sword wound in his chest.</p> + +<p>Unmindful of his own danger, the giant turned to the aid of Chester, +who, at that moment was at the mercy of an enemy’s sword. A +mighty stroke of the massive arm and the German lay dead on the +ground.</p> + +<p>The Germans, having had the worst of this encounter with a single +foe, stood back and drew their revolvers. Quickly Alexis reversed his +own weapon and fired. There was one enemy less. A bullet struck him in +the chest. He staggered, but recovered, and again fired at his +foes.</p> + +<p>The revolvers of the two lads were also spitting fire. A bullet +grazed Hal’s head and he toppled over. He was up in a moment, +however, fighting more fiercely than before. Chester felt a stinging +sensation in his right arm. Quickly he transferred his weapon to his +left hand, and it continued to send out its deadly missiles.</p> + +<p>But this unequal contest could not last. It must be ended.</p> + +<p>Alexis, wounded in a score of places, his giant body hacked and +hewn, hurled himself forward in one last desperate attack. Germans +quailed before the very fury of his face; they tumbled here and there +beneath his sword, or sweeping blows of his now empty revolver. A +bullet struck the giant in the throat. He dropped his revolver and +clapped his hand to the wound. Another struck him in the shoulder. He +sprang forward, struck down another of the enemy, then staggered +back.</p> + +<p>And at that moment there came the sound of tramping footsteps on the +sand. Turning quickly Hal and Chester perceived approaching rapidly a +body of Swedish troops. The Germans saw them at the same instant. They +were still a mile away across the sands, but the Germans had no mind to +be caught and interned. Quickly they leaped for their aircraft, all +except those who remained upon the sands, their faces turned upward or +buried therein.</p> + +<p>Hal and Chester each seized Alexis by an arm and dragged him back +toward their own aëroplane, now righted and waiting only the touch that +would send it into the air. The giant Cossack staggered along, but it +was plain to both lads that he was about to collapse.</p> + +<p>“Come, come, Alexis!” cried Hal, trying to urge him on. +“Only a few more steps and we will be all right.”</p> + +<p>To the very side of the craft they carried him; but here, shaking +himself free of their detaining hands, he suddenly fell, face forward, +upon the ground. Quickly the two lads bent over him, and succeeded in +turning him on his back.</p> + +<p>His voice came in faint gasps. The boys bent near to catch what he +was saying.</p> + +<p>“Leave me here! You go on!” came his voice. “I am +done for! Save yourselves!”</p> + +<p>The lads waited to hear no more. Chester took him by the feet and +Hal by the head, and with great effort succeeded in placing him within +the aëroplane, stretching him out, as well as they could across two of +the seats. Then Chester sprang in and Hal jumped to the wheel.</p> + +<p>Along the beach the craft skimmed lightly, then arose from the +ground. At the same instant a volley rang out from the approaching +Swedish troops and the officer in command called out to surrender. The +German airships, for some unaccountable reason, had not waited to +resume the fight upon ascending into the air, but had made off.</p> + +<p>Hal headed the aëroplane due westward, making for the coast of +England. Alexis had lapsed into unconsciousness upon being placed in +the machine, but now he stirred feebly and spoke.</p> + +<p>“A real fight, wasn’t it?” he gasped. “I +told you I could do it if I were on the ground. How many was it I +killed? Twenty–thirty–forty―”</p> + +<p>He broke off and burst into a fit of coughing. Chester bent over him +anxiously.</p> + +<p>“You’ll be all right in a day or two, old man,” he +said gently.</p> + +<p>Alexis smiled feebly.</p> + +<p>“Don’t try to fool me,” he said. “I am a +man. I know when death is near and I am not afraid to face +it.”</p> + +<p>Both lads realized that their giant Cossack friend was near his end, +but there was nothing they could do for him. Chester bound up the +wounds as well as he could, stopping the flow of blood, but that was +all.</p> + +<p>As the aëroplane flew over the sea toward the coast of England, the +dying man continued to talk. Now he sat up in the craft and gazed down +over the side.</p> + +<p>“I had always thought,” he said slowly, “that I +should end my days in my own land. As it is I shall not end them in any +land at all; but in the air. It is strange.”</p> + +<p>Hal slowed the aëroplane down until it was barely moving and turned +to Alexis.</p> + +<p>“You are wrong,” he said. “You are not going to +die. In a few hours we shall be in England, where you shall have the +best of medical attention.”</p> + +<p>“It is too late,” replied the Cossack calmly. “I +shall not live an hour.”</p> + +<p>His breath came with difficulty.</p> + +<p>“There is one thing I should like to know,” he said.</p> + +<p>“What is it, Alexis?” asked Hal.</p> + +<p>“Will you tell me what you meant by ‘drawing the long +bow’?”</p> + +<p>Hal was silent for some moments, and then replied gravely.</p> + +<p>“When a man boasts of things he has never done, in America it +is called ‘drawing the long bow.’ I was mistaken in your +case. It would be impossible for you to ‘draw the long +bow.’ You have done too much.”</p> + +<p>“That is true,” agreed Chester.</p> + +<p>Suddenly the giant frame fell back. Hal turned as best he could +while Chester leaned over him anxiously. Alexis extended a hand to each +of them, which they grasped.</p> + +<p>“This,” he said, pressing their hands in a still strong +grip, “is the end. I wish that I could have lived to see the +outcome of this war.”</p> + +<p>“There can be but one outcome,” replied Chester softly. +“You may rest assured of that.”</p> + +<p>“True,” said the giant, “but I would like to have +seen my old home again.”</p> + +<p>The lads were silent. Finally Hal spoke.</p> + +<p>“To think,” he said, “that we are responsible for +your fate; but for us you would have remained with the army and have +lived to the end of the war. We are to blame.”</p> + +<p>“Sh-h-h,” whispered the dying giant. The hand which held +Chester’s freed itself and groped in his pocket. “But for +you lads,” he continued, “I should never have won +this.”</p> + +<p>He pulled from his pocket the Cross of St. George, pinned to his +breast by the Russian emperor, and gazed at it lovingly.</p> + +<p>“It is well worth the sacrifice,” he said.</p> + +<p>Still holding the medal his hand again sought Chester’s and +pressed it. His other hand still gripped Hal’s.</p> + +<p>“Good-by, boys,” he said firmly. “Let the Grand +Duke know.”</p> + +<p>The pressure upon their hands relaxed. The giant frame of Alexis +Vergoff, brave man and fighter extraordinary, stiffened and lay still. +He was dead.</p> + +<p>And as the aëroplane swept over the sea to the distant coast of +England Hal and Chester mourned the loss of a true and stanch +friend.</p> + +<p>Arrived in England the lads saw the body of Alexis laid to rest with +fitting honors, and continued their mission to the continent, where Hal +put the document entrusted to his care by the Russian Grand Duke +Nicholas into the hands of Field Marshal Sir John French, +commander-in-chief of the British forces on the continent.</p> + +<p>And so we shall take leave of them for a short time. Their +subsequent adventures will be found in a succeeding volume, entitled: +“The Boy Allies in the Trenches; or Midst Shot and Shell Along +the Aisne.”</p> + +<p class='tac mt20'>THE END.</p> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Boy Allies with the Cossacks, by Clair W. 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Hayes + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Boy Allies with the Cossacks + Or, A Wild Dash over the Carpathians + +Author: Clair W. Hayes + +Release Date: January 13, 2010 [EBook #30951] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOY ALLIES WITH THE COSSACKS *** + + + + +Produced by Roger Frank, D Alexander and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + + + +THE BOY ALLIES WITH THE COSSACKS + +OR + +A WILD DASH OVER THE CARPATHIAN MOUNTAINS + +By CLAIR W. HAYES + +AUTHOR OF + + "The Boy Allies at Liege" + "The Boy Allies On the Firing Line" + "The Boy Allies In the Trenches" + +A. L. BURT COMPANY + +NEW YORK + + + + +Copyright, 1915 + +By A. L. Burt Company + +The Boy Allies with the Cossacks + + + + +[Illustration: ALEXIS--FROM HIS CANTEEN POURED WATER OVER THE LAD'S +FACE. _Page 203._ _The Boy Allies With the Cossacks_.] + + + + +THE BOY ALLIES WITH THE COSSACKS. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +FLYING. + + +"What's that below, Hal?" + +The speaker was Chester Crawford, an American lad of some 16 years. + +Hal Paine allowed his eyes to turn from the steering wheel and glanced +over the side of the flying aeroplane. + +"I don't see anything," he replied, after a careful scrutiny below. + +"Neither do I, now," said Chester, straining his eyes. + +At this moment the third occupant of the machine made his presence +known. + +"Woof! Woof!" he exclaimed. + +The third speaker was Marquis, a dog. + +"Woof! Woof!" he barked again. + +Hal, with a quick move, slackened the speed of the aeroplane, and let it +glide gently closer to the earth. + +"Must be something wrong," he confided to Chester, "or Marquis wouldn't +be barking like that." + +Both lads peered into the darkness that engulfed them on all sides. As +far as the eye could penetrate there was nothing but blackness, solid, +intense. + +"Let's go a little lower, Hal," whispered Chester. + +Under Hal's firm hand the aeroplane came down gently, until at last it +was soaring close to the treetops. And now, suddenly, both lads made out +the cause of Marquis's uneasiness. + +Beneath them were thousands upon thousands of armed men. To the north, +to the south, and to the east and west the dense mass of humanity +stretched out. Hal and Chester, flying close to the earth, at last could +make out moving forms below them. + +Suddenly it became light. Not broad daylight, but the darkness gave way +enough for the lads to distinguish what lay below them. The dawn of +another day was breaking. + +At the same instant that the lads made out the huge mass of humanity +upon the ground their presence in the air was discovered. There came the +sound of a single shot and the whiz of a bullet, as it sped close to +Hal's ear. + +With a quick movement the lad sent the plane soaring high in the air +once more. So sudden was the movement that Chester, caught unprepared, +lost his balance, and saved himself from tumbling to the ground only by +clutching the side of the machine. Marquis also had a narrow escape from +being thrown out. He let out a loud yelp of fear, as he was thrown +violently against Chester. The lad threw out a hand and grabbed him by +the scruff of the neck, just as it seemed he would plunge to certain +destruction. + +"Say!" he called to Hal, when he finally regained his breath and his +head. "What's the matter with you? You almost dumped us both out." + +"Did I?" replied Hal briefly. "Well, as long as you didn't fall it's all +right. We had to come up suddenly, or the chances were we would have +gone down suddenly. But it's my fault. I should have given you warning. +Are you hurt?" + +"No," replied Chester. + +"I'll be careful next time," said Hal. "You'll have to forgive me this +once." + +"Say no more about it," answered Chester. "But what was the cause of +this sudden rise?" + +"Cause!" repeated Hal in astonishment. "You don't mean to tell me you +don't know the cause? Didn't you hear that shot?" + +"Yes, I heard it. But how do you know whether it was fired by friend or +foe?" + +"I can't see as that would make any difference if it happened to hit us. +However, I'm morally certain they were Germans." + +"Well, maybe they were. What are we going to do now?" + +"We'll stay up here until we are absolutely certain we have passed over +the German lines. Then we'll come down." + +The machine was high in the air now, and, peering intently over the +side, as he did, Chester was unable to make out anything below in the +early morning light. + +But in the rear, soaring high in the air, although neither lad realized +it, a new danger threatened. When the presence of the boys' plane had +been discovered, a German craft had immediately risen, and was now in +pursuit. + +Glancing over his shoulder, Chester was the first to discover that they +were followed. At the same moment that he perceived the pursuing machine +there came a shot from the enemy. + +There was no need for Chester to cry out to Hal. The sound of the shot +told the latter of their danger, and he immediately threw the speed +lever over as far as it would go. + +The machine bounded forward. + +But the pursuer also came on faster than before; and, while it was +apparent that he was not lessening the distance between the two craft, +he nevertheless was still in range, and his rifle continued to crack. +However, neither the machine nor its three occupants were struck. + +Chester took a snap shot at the other craft with his revolver, but the +bullet fell short. While the enemy could pepper them at will with his +rifle, a bullet from the lad's revolver could not reach him. + +Hal heard the sound of Chester's revolver, and called out: + +"Did you hit him?" + +"No!" Chester shouted back, "he's too far behind. But he'll get us in a +minute if we don't do something." To himself he added: "If I only had a +rifle!" + +"You be ready with your revolver," Hal called to his friend, "and I'll +soon fix that. It's our only chance." + +Abruptly he slackened the speed of the machine, and swiftly the enemy +came on. So suddenly had Hal acted that the man at the wheel of the +pursuing machine could not act promptly enough, and was within range of +Chester's revolver before he could slow down. + +As the first machine righted after its abrupt halt, Chester took +deliberate aim and fired, even at the moment that a bullet passed close +to his head. + +There was a yell from the pursuing machine. A man leaped suddenly to his +feet, shaking the frail craft violently as he did so, waved his arms +once, twice, and toppled into space. + +"I got one of 'em," Chester shouted to Hal, and his lips shut grimly. + +"Good for you!" Hal shouted back. + +Even Marquis realized that it was time to be pleased, and he sent up a +sharp bark of joy. His canine intelligence told him that something that +threatened had been overcome. + +But the man at the wheel of the German aeroplane, now that he was alone, +was not minded to give up the chase. The machine darted at the boys' +craft suddenly, and, but for the fact that Hal at that very moment +happened to glance over his shoulder, the sharp-pointed prow of the +German craft would have cut them down. + +With a sudden twist of the wheel, however, Hal sent the machine out of +the path of the German, and, as the enemy sped by, Chester took a snap +shot with his revolver. + +Evidently he missed, for the German checked his plane and returned to +the attack. + +"So," said Hal to himself, "two can play at that game." + +Once more he avoided the German rush; and then, wheeling his own craft +at the moment the German sped by, he dashed in pursuit. The enemy, doing +the work of two men, did not perceive this change in tactics by his +foes, and, even as he slowed down to turn and make another attack, the +point of the lad's machine plowed into him. + +There was a ripping, tearing sound; the German plane wavered and started +to fall as the craft in which the boys were flying dashed by. But, by a +superhuman effort, the German succeeded in righting his craft. + +Then, holding the wheel steady with one hand, he calmly produced a +revolver and took deliberate aim at Hal. + +There was a sharp crack, followed immediately by another, but Hal was +unharmed. + +Realizing the German's purpose, Chester's weapon had spoken a second +before that of the enemy. The lad had not had time to take careful aim, +but the bullet sped true, striking the German squarely in the forehead, +even at the moment his finger pressed the trigger of his own revolver. + +Chester saw the man throw up his hands and fall backward. The German +plane, now without a hand to keep it steady, rocked crazily for several +moments, then turned turtle and went tumbling over and over toward the +ground. + +"Did you get him, Chester?" asked Hal, who had not turned his head, and +therefore had not perceived his own danger. + +"Yes, I got him," replied Chester simply. + +"Good!" returned Hal. "And the machine?" + +"Gone!" + +The lads now paused to take stock of their own damage, if any. There was +none. Not a German bullet had so much as struck the machine. + +"They are not very good marksmen, are they?" said Hal, with a slight +grin. + +"Doesn't look that way," returned Chester. "However, maybe those fellows +are not the best specimens." + +"Maybe not," replied Hal. + +"What next?" asked Chester, after a slight pause. + +"Guess we might as well go on," replied Hal. "There may be some more of +those German machines flying after us, so I guess it behooves us to get +away from here as soon as possible." + +"I guess you are right," Chester acquiesced. + +Once more the aeroplane straightened itself out on its course and, +flying high--absolutely hidden from the ground by a dense mass of black +clouds that seemed to spring up as if by magic--sped on. + +Hal, with firm hands on the wheel, kept his gaze directly ahead. Chester +settled himself comfortably in his seat again, and Marquis, after +sniffing about for several moments, finally composed himself to sleep. + +In spite of the fact that he was flying far above ground, the dog had +not shown a sign of nervousness or fright. Evidently he had no fear. +Possibly through his head flashed the thought that if these young boys +who were caring for him had saved him once, it was no more than they +would do again. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +BEYOND THE ENEMY. + + +Hal Paine and Chester Crawford, two young American lads, had already +seen much active service in the great European war of 1914, the greatest +war of all history. + +With Hal's mother they had been in the capital of Germany when the +conflagration broke out. In making their way from Berlin they had been +separated from Mrs. Paine and, thrown upon their resources, it became +necessary for them to make their way out of Germany alone, or else to +stay in Berlin for an indefinite time. The boys elected to leave. + +With Major Raoul Derevaux, a French Officer, then a captain, and Captain +Harry Anderson, an Englishman, they had finally succeeded in making +their way into the Belgian lines. They had witnessed the heroic defense +of the Belgians at Liege, and had themselves taken part in the battle. +Having accomplished several missions successfully, they had come to be +looked upon with the greatest respect by the Belgian commander. + +At Louvain Hal was wounded, and Chester had him conveyed to Brussels. +Here the lads again fell in with Captain Anderson, and, through the good +offices of the latter, eventually found themselves attached to the +British forces on the continent. They had gained favor in the eyes of +Sir John French, the British Field Marshal in command of the British +troops, and had successfully accomplished several difficult missions. + +Taken prisoners by the Germans, they had been saved from death at the +hands of a firing squad by the Emperor of Germany himself, and had +finally been taken back to Berlin. + +In the streets of the German capital, one day, a message had been put +into their hands by an English prisoner, who declared that its delivery +to the Grand Duke Nicholas, commander of the hosts of the Czar of +Russia, was a matter of much moment. + +Displaying great resourcefulness and bravery, the lads had succeeded in +escaping from Berlin in an aeroplane, as narrated in "The Boy Allies on +the Firing Line," the same in which, at the opening of this story, we +find them flying swiftly eastward. + +Crack revolver shots, and having skill in the use of the sword and with +their fists, the boys had fought themselves out of many ticklish +situations. And now, free again, they were making all speed to deliver +the message from the combined leaders of two countries to Grand Duke +Nicholas, a message that would mean closer cooperation between the +Russians in the east and the British and French forces in the west. + +The Russian campaign so far could hardly be called a success. True, the +first German advance into Poland, with Warsaw as its object, had been +checked, and the invader had been driven back; but the mighty legions of +the Czar of all the Russias could not be mobilized with the swiftness of +the Kaiser's troops; and, when mobilized, could not be transported to +the front with the same dispatch. + +Reenforced after their first defeat in Poland, the Germans had begun a +new drive into the heart of Poland. Day after day they drew nearer and +nearer to the little capital, Warsaw--the Russians retreating before +them. + +But now, within two days' march of Warsaw, the Russians held steadily, +and, try as he might, the German commander could not break through this +line of steel. Grand Duke Nicholas, commander-in-chief of the Russian +armies--who at first had been with the southern army opposing the +Austrians and advancing upon Cracow, in Galicia--had hurried north, to +take personal command in Poland. + +His presence had instilled new vigor into the Russian troops, and, after +several days of defensive action, the Russian troops had at last resumed +the offensive. + +It was toward this mighty army that the aeroplane that had borne the +boys through the heart of the enemy was now flying swiftly. + +"Seems to me," said Hal, "that by this time we must have passed the +German lines. I guess we might as well go down a bit and have a look +around." + +Accordingly the machine glided nearer the earth. The day was dark and +foggy, and at first the lads could discern nothing below but a great +blur. + +They drew closer. + +At that moment there came a shot from below. Hal instinctively threw +over the lever in an effort to take the craft out of harm's way. + +But the machine did not respond to his touch. + +"Great Scott!" he cried. "That one bullet must have put us out of +commission. We'll have to go down, or be shot to pieces up here." + +Gently the little craft glided toward the earth; and now the boys could +make out the objects below. + +On all sides, stretching out as far as the eye could see, was a mighty +mass of moving men. + +"Germans?" asked Chester anxiously. + +"We'll soon see," replied Hal briefly. + +It was apparent now that those below, realizing that the aircraft was +falling, would not fire at it again. With upturned eyes thousands of men +watched the flight of the little plane, as it soared down among them. + +Hal looked closely at the men, as the machine drew near the ground, and +then exclaimed: + +"No, they are not Germans; Russians, that's what they are." + +Chester raised a feeble cheer. + +"Hurrah!" he shouted. + +Marquis, aroused by the sound of the lad's voices, arose and stretched. +Even he seemed pleased. + +And now the aeroplane bumped the ground, and the lads stepped out to see +a long line of rifle barrels confronting them. + +The lads threw up their hands instantly, but Marquis's back bristled and +he growled threateningly. + +"Keep quiet!" Chester commanded, and the dog grew still. An officer +approached the lads. + +"What do you here?" he demanded, in some language the lads could not +understand. + +The lads shook their heads, and the officer tried again, this time in +German. + +"What do you here?" he demanded. + +As briefly as possible, Hal, acting as spokesman, explained. The +officer's incredulous gaze grew more so as the lad went on with his +story. When the lad had finished, he said simply: + +"I don't believe you!" + +Hal was angry in a second. He took a step toward the officer. + +"What do you mean by that?" he demanded. + +The officer stood his ground. + +"Just what I say," he replied. "I don't believe you. The tale you tell +is impossible." + +Chester stepped into the breach. He took Hal by the arm. + +"Of course such a tale is hard to believe," he said. "But, nevertheless, +it is true. We carry an important message for the Grand Duke." + +"Well," said the officer, "I don't think you will see him. He is too +busy to give up his time to listen to such a tale as yours." + +But at this moment a second officer, apparently the other's superior, +approached. To him, upon request, Hal repeated his story. This officer +also looked incredulous, but the result was different. + +"You tell a very strange story," he said, "but it is not for me to pass +upon its veracity. You shall be given an audience with the Grand Duke; +but, mark me well, if it is found that you have been lying--that you +have nothing of importance, it will go hard with you." + +"We have no fear of that, sir," said Chester briefly. + +"All right, then. Follow me." + +The lads did as ordered, Marquis trailing along after them. Through +thousands of rapidly-moving men the lads followed the officer, and at +last, after more than an hour's walk, came to a stop, upon command, in +front of a large, bewhiskered man, of imposing military stature. + +"This," said the officer who had conducted them, "is Grand Duke +Nicholas." + +The officer looked down on them. + +"What is it?" he demanded gruffly. + +The officer repeated the story the boys had told him. The Grand Duke +grew greatly interested as the story progressed, and, when the message +was mentioned, he interrupted. + +"Enough," he said. "I have been expecting such a message." He turned to +the two lads. "Do you bear it?" he asked. + +Hal bowed in assent. + +"Then give it to me!" he cried eagerly. + +Chester reached in his pocket, and a moment more the Grand Duke eagerly +clutched the paper the lad handed him--a paper they had gone through so +much to deliver. + +The Grand Duke read the message through twice, sitting on his horse +without a move, his face a perfect blank. Then he thrust it into his +pocket and turned once more to the two lads. + +"You have done well," he said. "Captain, you will see that they are +brought to my quarters to-night at eight o'clock. I desire to question +them. In the meantime, see that they are fed and clothed properly, for +it is very cold." + +The officer saluted, and the Grand Duke rode away, closely followed by +the members of his staff. At a sign from the officer in whose charge +they had been left, the lads followed him. + +Toward the rear of the army they continued their way, coming at last +upon a row of tents. Into one of these the officer led the way, the lads +and the dog following him. + +Here the officer quickly set out food, and the boys fell to with a will, +for it was a long time since a morsel had passed their lips. Then, +having satisfied their appetites, they informed the officer that they +would like to rest. + +The officer nodded, and showed them into another tent, where two bunks +had been prepared. With a word of thanks, the boys climbed in, and the +officer left them alone. + +"Well," said Chester, "we have accomplished our mission successfully. +What are we going to do now?" + +"I have been thinking," Hal replied, "of how life on this side of the +war arena would go." + +"You mean stay here and not return to France?" asked Chester. + +"Exactly. I have read that the Russian Cossacks are terrible fighters. I +would like to see some of them in action." + +"And so would I," declared Chester. + +"All right," said Hal. "Then, if you are agreeable, when we see the +Grand Duke to-night, I shall ask him if he cannot arrange to assign us +to duties with the Russian army." + +In another moment the two lads, tired out, were fast asleep, with +Marquis on guard. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +UNDER THE BEAR. + + +"So, Your Excellency," Hal concluded, "you may see that we have had +considerable active service." + +The Russian Grand Duke Nicholas did not reply for some moments. It was +plain that he was greatly impressed, as he had been greatly interested +in the boys' adventures since they had taken service with the Allies +just before the defense of Liege. + +"Yes," he said at length, "you certainly have seen considerable service; +and, in bringing me this paper safely"--the Grand Duke tapped his breast +pocket--"you have rendered an invaluable service to our cause. I am +indeed glad to know you. Now, if there is anything I can do to show my +appreciation, you may consider it done." + +Remembering their conversation of a few hours before, Hal started to +speak, then hesitated. Realizing that the lad had something he felt a +delicacy of saying, the Grand Duke said: + +"Come, out with it. What can I do for you?" + +"Well, Your Excellency," said Hal, "my friend and I would like to see +service with the Russian army." + +"What!" exclaimed the Grand Duke. + +"Yes," Chester broke into the conversation. "We have talked it over, and +we have decided that we would like to see service in the Eastern theater +of war." + +"Hm-m-m," said the Duke, stroking his mustache, "and have you picked out +the branch of the service to which you would like to be attached?" + +"Yes, sir," said Hal; "we have." + +"And that is?" questioned the Grand Duke. + +"The cavalry, Your Excellency--the Cossacks." + +The Grand Duke jumped to his feet in surprise. + +"Well, well!" he exclaimed. "You have certainly picked out the most +difficult thing you could have asked me. Still, I have no doubt it can +be arranged." + +"If it will inconvenience you, your Excellency----" Chester began. + +"Tut! Tut!" the Grand Duke interrupted him, with a wave of his hand. "It +shall be done. Consider the matter settled. Do you know anything of the +Cossacks?" + +"Why, yes, Your Excellency," replied Hal. "We have read considerable +about them." + +"Still," said the Grand Duke, "I'll warrant you do not know overly much +about them. I'll tell you a little, if you like." + +"We would be glad to hear Your Excellency," said Chester. + +"The Cossacks," said the Grand Duke, "from whom the Russian cavalry is +mainly drawn, form a community within the Russian Empire enjoying +special rights and privileges in return for military service. Each +Cossack village holds its land as a commune, and the village assembly +fixes local taxation and elects the local judges. It has been estimated +that the Cossacks will place 400,000 armed men in the field in this war. + +"Both in historical writings and in fiction the Cossacks are often +represented as little better than savages. But this is a mistake, for +the level of education among the Cossacks is higher than in the rest of +Russia. + +"Now, the Cossacks have always been fighters--none better in the world. +They have won renown wherever they have fought by their daring and +bravery. But the Cossacks, to a certain degree, are clannish--they do +not take kindly to those not of their kind. Which is the reason, as I +said, you had made it hard for me when you asked to be assigned to a +Cossack regiment. By the way, can you ride?" + +"Yes, Your Excellency," replied Hal. "We are both used to the saddle, +having ridden much in America." + +"Well," said the Grand Duke, "I will see that it is arranged. Report to +me here in the morning." + +The lads saluted and took their departure, returning to the spot where +they had sought rest only a few short hours before. + +It was about seven o'clock the following morning when they again stood +in the presence of the Grand Duke. With him was an officer in a dark +uniform, that gave evidence of having seen hard service, but gaily +bedecked nevertheless. He was a large man, fully six feet in height, and +built proportionately. The Grand Duke motioned the boys to approach. + +"This," he said, indicating the officer who stood beside him, "is your +future commander, General Ivan Jorvitch. I have informed him of your +request, and my command that it be granted." + +The lads saluted the general, and he acknowledged the salute stiffly. + +"I am not at all sure as to how they will be received by the men, sir," +he said to the Grand Duke. + +"You will see that they are well treated," replied the Grand Duke. "My +commands are not to be treated lightly. These lads will be attached to +your staff with the rank of lieutenants. They are not to serve in the +ranks." + +"Yes, your excellency," said the general, saluting. + +"You will find, general," continued the Grand Duke, "that you may depend +upon them to the limit. I fancy I am a good judge of character. They +have already done me an invaluable service. They may do more." + +The Grand Duke then proceeded to relate some of the lads' exploits and +informed the general of the message they had brought. + +General Jorvitch thawed immediately upon hearing this, and extended a +hand to each lad in turn. + +"I shall be glad to have you with me," he told them sincerely. "I +feared, at first, that the Grand Duke was trying an experiment." + +In spite of the general's first gruffness the lads had taken a liking to +him. Straight and erect, with a flashing eye, he was the beau ideal of a +soldier. Still, there was a slight twinkle in the corner of those same +eyes, which proclaimed him a man, though stern, of a kindly disposition. + +The lads thanked the general, and their interview with the Grand Duke +concluded, followed their new commander back to his quarters. + +"I have been ordered to advance," the general informed them as they made +their way along, "and as soon as I have introduced you to your fellow +officers and procured you uniforms and horses, we shall proceed." + +An hour later, in true Russian garb and astride two fiery chargers, the +lads made their way forward with the rest of the troop. In all there +were probably 10,000 Cossacks in this advance. + +With one of the Cossack officers, a young lieutenant, huge in stature +and pleasant of face, the lads at once struck up a friendship. He stood +at least six feet six and seemed a Goliath in strength. He it was who +picked their horses for them, and obtained their uniforms. Some of the +other officers, while not openly hostile, still were disdainful of the +two boys, and plainly not well pleased with their company. + +"Have you any idea where we are bound?" asked Hal in German of their new +friend, who introduced himself with a swagger as "Lieutenant Alexis +Vergoff." + +"Lodz; and when we get there we'll make the Germans hard to find," was +the answer, made in a loud, boasting tone. + +Hal and Chester glanced at each other and smiled quizzically. The same +thought was in the mind of each: "He talks too boastfully to be much of +a fighter." + +Alexis noticed the interchange of glances, and the quizzical smiles. He +realized their meaning in an instant. + +"You think I won't fight, eh?" he said loudly. "Alexis Vergoff not +fight? Ho! Ho!" + +He threw back his head and laughed loudly. The boys were not impressed. + +"Worse and more of it," thought Hal to himself. + +Chester was of the same opinion, but he did not say so aloud. + +"Why," continued Alexis, "I've fought more battles than you will ever +hear of. I have killed twenty men." + +"Twenty is a good many," said Hal softly. + +"True! True!" shouted Alexis, "but I'll kill twenty more in the next +battle, just to show you. You shall see what sort of a man Alexis +Vergoff is!" + +"I am afraid we shall see too soon," muttered Chester to himself. + +"Why," went on Alexis, "it was only a month ago, before being ordered to +the front, that I slew five men single-handed!" + +"Great Scott!" muttered Hal. "I wish I had not started him. He'll never +let up now." + +"It was at my mother's home," continued Alexis. "I reached home +unexpectedly. Five men had surrounded her and threatened to kill her +unless she gave them money she kept in the house. One had drawn a knife +just as I entered the room. No one saw me enter, and I was upon them +before they knew it. + +"I picked up the man with the knife as though he had been a child, and +threw him bodily upon the other four. He had no time to strike at me +with his knife or even drop it. The other four went down in a heap. The +knife of the first man was buried in one of his companions, and so there +were only three who could stagger to their feet. I picked up a lamp that +stood on the table. This I hurled at another. It struck him squarely on +the head, and rebounded against the head of another. Both men went down +with cracked skulls. The fifth man turned to flee, but picking up a +knife, I hurled it after him. It stuck in his back, and he ran half a +mile before he fell down dead. The next man jumped for me----" + +"Hold on!" said Hal, laughing. "You said there were only five, and you +have already killed them." + +"True!" muttered Alexis, though in no wise taken aback. "It was in +another fight where I killed six men. I always get them mixed up. In +that fight----" + +"Save that for another time," said Hal, restraining his laughter with +difficulty. + +"Don't you want to hear it?" demanded Alexis in surprise. "I always like +to hear a story of a good fight." + +"I believe you would rather tell one," replied Hal. + +Alexis looked very much crestfallen. + +"Do you think I made that up?" he asked in consternation. "Why, I can +tell you of other fights I have had that----" + +"I don't doubt it at all," said Hal. "I am willing to admit that you can +draw the long bow to the Queen's taste." + +"Draw the long bow?" repeated Alexis, puzzled. "What do you mean?" + +"It wouldn't do for me to tell you," replied Hal chuckling to himself. +"Ask someone else." + +Alexis turned to Chester. + +"Do you know what he means? Will you tell me?" he asked. + +"Yes, I know what he means," replied Chester, laughing, "and I believe +he is right. However, it wouldn't do for me to tell you either. You must +ask someone else." + +Alexis turned to the man on his right, and repeated his question. The +man acknowledged he knew no more what the expression meant than Alexis +himself. + +Alexis accosted several other officers, but with no better luck. He +turned to Hal aggrieved. + +"You should not have said that unless you tell me what you mean," he +said. + +"Ask Colonel Bluekoff, perhaps he may tell you," said Hal. + +Alexis approached the Colonel. + +"What is it, sir?" asked the latter. + +"Colonel," said Alexis, saluting, "can you tell me what drawing the long +bow means?" + +The colonel looked at him in amazement. Then he said sternly: + +"Get back to your place, sir. This is no time for joking." + +Alexis returned to his place. + +"Did he tell you?" asked Hal. + +"No," replied Alexis, "but I'll find out, if I have to put off killing +one of my enemies to ask him about it." + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +LODZ. + + +There came a sudden command from Colonel Bluekoff, and the regiment to +which Hal and Chester were attached galloped forward. The advance guard +could be seen falling back, firing as they retreated upon the main body +of cavalry. They had encountered a force of the enemy. + +With Colonel Bluekoff leading, his sword whirling about his head, the +troop dashed forward at a charge. As they went by, the retreating +advance guard reformed and also dashed forward with them. From ahead +came several puffs of smoke and the cracking of rifles, and here and +there a man fell to the ground. But the rest dashed on. + +The Cossacks did not fire a shot and soon the enemy had disappeared in +the distance. + +"A reconnoitering force that must have gotten around Lodz in some way," +Colonel Bluekoff told his officers. + +The regiment now fell back upon the main body. + +"That's two more," said Alexis complacently to Hal and Chester. + +"Two more what?" demanded Hal. + +"Two more of the enemy I have killed," said Alexis without a suspicion +of a smile. "Didn't you see them go down when I fired?" + +"I didn't know we fired a shot," said Chester, with a laugh. + +"Sh-h-h," whispered Alexis, "do you want to get me into trouble?" + +"Trouble," said Chester. "What do you mean?" + +"Don't you know I'd get into trouble if the colonel knew I had fired +without orders, even though I killed two of the enemy." + +"Great Scott!" muttered Hal to himself. "He is the limit." + +Alexis showed his revolver to Hal and Chester. + +"Little invention of my own," he said. "Now I'll leave it to you, you +didn't hear me when I fired, did you?" + +"No," said Chester emphatically, "I did not." + +"I knew it," exclaimed Alexis triumphantly. "You see," he explained, +patting the revolver, "that's how I was able to kill two of the enemy +without you hearing the sound of my revolver. Little invention of my +own. No noise, no smoke." + +Hal stretched out a hand. + +"Let me have a look at that wonderful weapon," he said. + +Alexis drew back, and returned the revolver quickly to its place. + +"No," he said seriously. "I wouldn't trust it out of my own hand. If +it's not handled just right, it might get out of commission, and I don't +believe I could make another like it." + +Hal whistled softly to himself. + +"He's the best I ever heard," he said to himself, "and I've heard a +whole lot of 'em at one time or another." + +Alexis rode ahead as complacently as before, whistling softly to +himself, pausing once just long enough to turn to Hal and ask: + +"Have you decided yet to tell me what you mean by drawing the long bow?" + +"While you have a gun like that in your possession, I wouldn't tell you +for the world," replied Hal. + +Now the column, at a command from General Jorvitch, increased its pace. +In the distance could be made out the buildings of a large town. + +"Lodz," said Alexis briefly, pointing ahead. + +Hal and Chester acknowledged they understood. The troop continued +onward. + +Lodz, an important railroad center, was one of the most important towns +in Poland, and the Grand Duke had decided that it must be held at all +hazards. There was already a large body of troops stationed there, but +the Grand Duke had not considered them sufficient to hold off the +ever-increasing horde of the Kaiser. Even now large masses of infantry +were being thrown forward to reenforce the troops already there. + +Acclaimed on all hands, the Cossacks rode rapidly through the town and +went into camp at the side facing the Germans. Outposts were thrown out +and the Cossacks sat down to a day of waiting. + +Having secured permission, Hal, Chester and Alexis walked back toward +the town. For several hours they strolled about, looking in the windows, +and purchasing several small articles. + +The people of Lodz were serene in their belief that there was no danger +of a German invasion, in spite of the nearness of the foe. Shops and +stores, theaters and all buildings were gaily decorated, and thousands +promenaded the streets. The city was in festival attire. + +"Looks like they were preparing for a celebration," Hal remarked to +Chester. + +"I should say it does," the latter returned. "But it wouldn't take the +Germans long to wreck the town, if they once got here. You remember +Louvain?" + +"Well, they won't get here," Alexis broke in. "One Cossack is always +good for ten Germans. Why, I remember----" + +"Tell us later," Hal interrupted. "We want to look about a little now." + +The three entered a store, where, Alexis' eye having been caught by a +red necktie, the Cossack purchased it. The necktie in his pocket, he +leaned over the counter and asked the salesman: + +"Say, what does drawing the long bow mean?" + +Hal and Chester burst into a loud guffaw, and the salesman, drawing +back, suddenly turned and disappeared. + +A man in civilian garb, who stood nearby, also broke into a loud guffaw. +Alexis turned on him angrily. + +"What are you laughing at?" he demanded. + +"Why, I'm laughing at you," replied the man calmly. "What about it?" + +Plainly Alexis was astonished at this reply. He drew back. + +"Oh, I guess it's all right," he said pleasantly. "I wasn't sure, that's +all." + +"And who are these children you have with you?" demanded the man. + +Hal answered this question himself. + +"None of your business," he said shortly. + +"Is that so?" said the man, stepping forward. "What if I should make it +some of my business?" + +Hal smiled. + +"I don't think you will," he said quietly. + +The man, large, though somewhat stout, with a red, evil-looking face, +stepped quickly forward, and tapped Hal lightly on the cheek with his +hand. + +"Let that teach you not to talk back to your elders," he said. + +"And let that teach you not to interfere in other people's business," +said Hal, also taking a step forward, and tapping his opponent lightly +on the cheek. + +The man grew very angry, and his face turned a dull red. He raised his +cane, and struck sharply at Hal. But Hal was not there, and a moment +later the man received a sharp jolt on the jaw as Hal's fist went home. + +The man let out a string of epithets and rushed at the boy. But the +latter was prepared for him, and drove him back with straight rights and +lefts; one blow brought a tiny stream of blood from the man's nose. + +He drew back. + +"You will answer for that," he said quietly, and turning, walked off. + +Hal shrugged his shoulders, and at that moment the salesman whom Alexis +had frightened a few moments before came back. + +"Do you know who that was?" he asked of Hal. + +"No," replied the lad, "and what's more, I don't care." + +"Well," said the salesman, "the man whom you just struck is Count de +Reslau, and he is very influential. You have made a bad enemy." + +"I don't care if he is the King of Poland," replied Hal. "No man can hit +me and get away without a return blow." + +Alexis, meanwhile, had been gazing at Hal in astonishment. Now he +approached and laid a hand on the lad's arm. + +"A real fighter!" he exclaimed. "A man after my own heart!" + +"I didn't see you doing much fighting just a moment ago," said Hal, +somewhat nettled. + +"Of course not," replied Alexis. "Do you think I wanted to get in +trouble? Suppose an officer had come along?" + +"Well," said Hal, "suppose he had?" + +"If he had, we would have lost our liberty for all time to come." + +"And is that why you didn't fight?" + +"Yes! Discipline in the Russian army is more strict than in any army in +the world; but you are certainly a fighter. The way you stood up to that +man reminds me of the time I----" + +"Come on," broke in Chester, not wanting to hear any more bluster, "and +let's get out of here." + +The three left the store, and continued their stroll about the town. As +they were passing an unfrequented corner, six men suddenly sprang out +upon them, armed with clubs and knives. + +Hal and Chester immediately backed up against a wall, and turned to +fight off their assailants; but not so Alexis. + +With a loud shout he rushed upon the six who had attacked them. Right +and left flew his huge fists, striking out blindly. One man toppled to +the ground. A stabbing wrist was caught in the Cossack's great hand, and +thrown twisting through the air. And at the same time Alexis called to +Hal and Chester: + +"Now you shall see how Alexis can fight!" + +But Hal and Chester had no mind to let Alexis fight the whole crowd of +assailants. They sprang to his aid. + +Alexis drove his right fist, with tremendous power behind it, right into +the face of the second man, and the latter went down to rise no more for +some time to come. + +Hal, with a sudden spring, clinched with one of the assailants, and the +two went tumbling to the ground. Chester and another of the enemy were +also rolling on the ground. + +Alexis reached one huge hand and grasped another of the foe by the back +of the neck, and lifted him, kicking and struggling, from his feet. The +last man turned to flee, but he had reckoned without the giant Cossack. + +Still holding one man by the scruff of the neck, the Cossack took a step +forward and, with his free hand, grasped the last man by the back of the +neck also. Then, holding one in either hand, he walked calmly to where +Hal and his opponent were engaged. + +Hal was uppermost, and Alexis, seizing a chance when the lad's head was +out of the way, dashed the man he held in his left hand, headfirst, +against the head of the enemy on the ground. There was a crunch, and +both men lay still. + +Then, with his other victim in his left hand, Alexis walked over to +where Chester and his opponent were rolling about, and performed a +similar operation. Then he lent each lad a hand in getting to his feet, +after which he turned and surveyed the field of battle. + +"Six!" he said briefly. "That's enough for one day. Come on! Let's get +away from here before some officer comes along and sees us." + +Both boys looked at the giant Cossack with amazement written large upon +their faces. From the first time that he had boasted to them, they had +put him down as anything but a fighter, in spite of his huge size. But +the quickness with which he had disposed of six men showed them that +they had been wrong. + +As they walked along, it was plain to the lads that something was +troubling Alexis; and at last Hal was moved to ask: + +"What's the matter, Alexis?" + +The huge Cossack looked at the lad for a moment, and then said: + +"There is no use my telling you, but I will. I want to know what you +meant by 'drawing the long bow.'" + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +ALEXIS IN BATTLE. + + +Both lads laughed heartily. + +"You'll learn before many days," said Hal, "and I am not as sure as I +was about it." + +"Nor I," agreed Chester. + +The three made their way back to their posts, where Alexis immediately +insisted on donning his new red necktie. Marquis, who had been left +behind while the three friends made a tour of the city, greeted them +with joyful barks. He had made friends with the big Cossack, and the +latter had taken quite a fancy to the dog. + +Hardly had the three retired to their positions, when an air of +excitement throughout the troops became apparent. There was bustle and +some slight confusion and shouted commands. A moment later and a body of +5,000 Cossacks, armed and spurred, stood beside their horses, ready to +mount and ride at the command. + +"Where do you suppose we are going?" asked Hal of Chester. + +"Haven't any idea," was the reply, "but it looks as though there was a +little fighting to be done." + +"That's what!" exclaimed Alexis, who stood beside the two lads. "Now you +shall see how we handle the Germans." + +"Mount!" came the command. + +As one man, the troop sprang to the saddle. + +"Forward!" came the next order, and the Cossacks started forward at a +gallop. + +Good riders themselves, Hal and Chester could not but envy the riding +prowess of their companions. Accounted among the best riders in the +world, the Cossacks who now dashed forward hurled themselves toward the +enemy with reckless abandon. Their lances held high in one hand, each +brandished a large revolver in his other. The bridles lay across the +horses' necks, the riders guiding their mounts by the pressure of their +knees. + +And so they swept forward, dashing swiftly over the few miles of open +ground toward the spot where the Germans were known to be entrenched. + +The enemy greeted them with a hail of bullets, but they faltered not. +Men fell and horses dropped, but there was no hesitation among those +left. + +Now a bugle sounded, and they dashed on with greater ferocity than +before. + +Squadrons of German cavalry issued forth to meet them. They crashed with +a terrible shock. The impact was terrific, and horses and riders on both +sides reeled back. + +But the Cossacks were the first to recover, and they spurred their +horses into the thick of the enemy. The sweep of their lances and the +fire from their automatics were deadly. There was no pause in the +Russian attack. + +Cutting and slashing, the squadron to which Hal, Chester and Alexis were +attached was soon in the midst of the foe. Not unused to such +encounters, the lads nevertheless found themselves hard put to keep +their seats and ward off the blows of their foes. + +But with each moment they gained confidence, and finally were fighting +with the best of them. Hal caught a descending lance on his upraised +sword, and raising his revolver took a snap shot at his opponent. The +latter threw his arms high, and toppled from his horse. Chester, by a +quick move, escaped a revolver shot aimed at him by a German officer, +and the lad's own weapon spoke sharply. His aim was true, and the German +dropped. + +Now the Germans began to give ground. It was impossible to stand in the +face of the terrible Cossack charge. The Russians pressed the retreating +foe closely. + +But now new forces of Germans dashed forward to drive back the Cossacks, +or at least to protect the retreat of their companions. + +The Cossacks dashed into these fresh troops with the same abandon they +had first charged. But this time the result was different. Tired by the +furious work, they were thrown back by the German reenforcements, and in +spite of heroic efforts, were forced to retire slowly. + +Flushed with this success, the Germans pressed on. The fighting was man +to man, horse to horse, and hand to hand. Not for once had Alexis left +the side of the two lads and none of the three had so far been injured, +although men dropped on all sides of them. + +Suddenly there came a command from Colonel Bluekoff. + +"Charge!" he cried. + +Immediately the squadron to which the lads were attached hurled itself +forward once more, right into the thickest of the fray, in the face of +overwhelming numbers. They dashed forward with the fury of madmen, +shouting and yelling as they charged. + +For a moment the Germans gave back, so terrible was the charge of this +mere handful of Cossacks, but for a moment only; then they came on +again. From all sides they bore down on the squadron, now completely cut +off from the main body of troops, seeking to annihilate them. + +There was no order to surrender from the German commander, nor would one +have been heeded for the matter of that. At a quick command, the +Cossacks formed a little square, back to back, and awaited the attack of +the enemy. + +It came upon the instant. Upon the Russian horsemen the Germans hurled +themselves bravely, cutting and shooting as they came on. The Cossacks +gave blow for blow, and in spite of the fierce charge, maintained their +unbroken front, though men fell here and there. Unable to pierce this +line of steel, the Germans drew off. + +Given this little breathing space, Hal and Chester, standing side by +side, took in the scene about them. Of the little troop of Cossacks +there remained now possibly a hundred men. Their support, the lads could +see, desperately engaged elsewhere, would be unable to come to their +assistance. It was up to them to fight it out alone. + +Colonel Bluekoff was down, having been pierced a few moments before by a +German bullet. Among these few men there were, besides Alexis, but two +minor officers unharmed. At that moment Alexis himself took command. + +His sword raised aloft, he turned flashing eyes upon his men. + +"Will we surrender?" he shouted, and answered his own question: "No!" + +A wild cheer from his men was the reply. The huge Cossack turned to the +two lads. + +"We will fight till the last," he said calmly. "Are you with us?" + +"We are," said Hal simply. + +"You bet!" Chester agreed. + +"Good!" exclaimed Alexis. + +He turned once more toward the enemy, who, it was evident, were +preparing for another attack upon the little band. The latter stood +quietly, awaiting the charge; and in a moment it came. + +Urging their horses on at a gallop, the Germans came rapidly forward. +There was the clash of steel on steel as the enemy hurled themselves +upon three sides of the little square simultaneously. Russians and +Germans dropped together, fighting till the last. + +But the odds against them were too great. Dense masses of the Germans +swooped down upon them, engulfing them, overpowering them. Hal, engaged +with a big German officer, had just succeeded in parrying a thrust of +the other's sword, when someone from behind struck him a heavy blow over +the head. The lad fell from his horse without a sound. + +Chester, seeing his friend fall, fought his way toward Hal. He was just +about to leap from his horse by his chum's side, when a tall German +trooper brought the flat of his sword down on the lad's head. Chester +also went hurtling to the ground. + +And now Alexis, with a few remaining men, was left to fight the enemy +alone. His sword whirling around his head in great sweeps, and an empty +revolver clutched tightly in his left hand; his teeth bared in a snarl +and his eyes flashing angrily, this great Cossack stood off his foes. + +Four men sprang upon him at once. Putting spurs to his horse, the giant +dashed in between them. Two he cut down with lightning-like slashes of +his sword, and a third he disposed of by hurling his empty revolver +squarely into his face. The sword of the fourth pierced him through the +left arm, but before the German could regain his balance after this +thrust, Alexis' sweeping sword had laid him low also. + +The giant Cossack was now the last of his troop in condition to fight. +Suddenly his horse staggered, and went to its knees. With a quick move, +Alexis freed himself and leaped from the saddle just as the animal, +dying from a pistol wound in its head, toppled to the ground. + +Alexis leaped up lightly and turned again to face his foes. + +A German officer urged his horse forward, seeking to ride him down. As +the horse approached, Alexis fell on one knee, and the horse, pierced by +his sword, fell to the ground. The officer leaped from the animal's +back, but before he could bring his revolver to bear upon Alexis, the +latter had pierced him through with a thrust of his sword. + +A dozen of the enemy sprang upon him. With his sword sweeping around his +head, seeming to make a circle of fire, the great Cossack held them at +bay. One ventured to spring at him, and without even stopping the whirl +of his weapon, Alexis dropped him at his feet. + +More Germans sprang to the attack--ten, twenty, thirty of them. +Hopelessly outnumbered, and believing that the end was near, Alexis gave +up his defensive tactics and leaped into the very midst of his foes. For +a moment they gave way before him, then closed in again like a pack of +hungry wolves. Here and there the giant's sword darted out and men +dropped beneath its thrust. + +Cutting and thrusting with his dripping sword, and striking out with his +naked fist, Alexis fought on. A sword pierced him through the shoulder, +but the man who had aimed the thrust paid the penalty with his life. Two +men closed in, and as the Cossack struck out at the one on his left with +his fist, the second German seized his sword arm. + +With a roar like that of an angry bull, Alexis gave a mighty wrench, and +the sword came free. At the same moment he felt a sting in his right +arm. A bullet had struck him. The giant scarcely felt his wounds, +although he was bleeding now in a dozen places. Before him, the ground +was full of dark swaying faces. His sword found another human sheath, +and being unable to withdraw it quickly enough to meet another of his +foes, he left it there and turned upon his enemies with his bare hands. + +He snatched a revolver from the ground, and not taking time to aim, +dashed it into the face of the nearest man, and then dashed forward, +hitting out with his naked fists. + +Vaguely he noticed the sameness of the faces about him. A short wiry man +sprang at him, and with a broken sword, stabbed him in the left +shoulder. Alexis caught him by the throat with his right hand, and the +man gave a choking screech as he lifted him clear off the ground. + +As he did so, someone behind him struck him a heavy blow on the head +with the butt of a revolver. With a last furious effort he turned upon +his foes, and dashed the man he held by the throat full into their +faces; fell forward upon the body and, with a great sob, he shuddered +and lay still. + +And there, on the battlefield on the plains of Poland, lay the bodies of +the two American lads and, a short distance away, that of Alexis, the +giant Cossack, their friend. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +MARQUIS. + + +The Russian cavalry, outnumbered by the Germans, had continued to give +ground and the Germans were still in pursuit. But now, from the distance +arose a cloud of dust, and a moment later, in a headlong dash to save +their companions, came a second body of Cossack cavalry, 5,000 strong, +to give battle to the Germans. + +Down they came upon the unprepared Germans, with yells and shouts, their +horses running free. At the same time that part of the first Cossack +body which still remained reformed and sprang forward. + +The Germans turned and fled. + +Then from the trenches came forth columns of infantry, supported by +field batteries, and in a moment these had opened upon the advancing +Russian horsemen; but in spite of this hail of death, the Cossacks did +not falter nor pause. Straight up to the mouth of the field guns they +rode--sabering the gunners right and left--and in a few moments these +had been silenced. + +Then the Cossacks turned their attention to the infantry, which, firing +with machine-like precision and accuracy, dealt havoc to the ranks of +the Russian horsemen and mowed them down. + +Several squadrons of Cossacks dismounted and approached the foe on foot, +and soon the fighting became hand to hand. The standard-bearer suddenly +threw up his hands and fell over backward, the colors fluttering to the +ground. + +A German officer, thinking to capture the flag, jumped forward, and +leaning down laid his hand upon it; but at that moment a hairy, snarling +body sprang forward, straight at the German's throat. The latter +released his hold on the flag and jumped to his feet to ward off the +attack of this strange enemy, which he could not at first make out. + +But this new enemy was not to be shaken off. His teeth found their mark, +and with a cry, the German tumbled to earth. + +The newcomer was Marquis. + +Separated from Hal and Chester, Marquis, though a battle dog, had become +uneasy at their absence and set out to find them. He had advanced with +the second troop of Cossacks, and seeing the dead upon the field, had +been trying to pick out the bodies of the two lads. + +But when the Russian standard-bearer, almost beside him, had been shot +down and the German had leaped for the colors, Marquis had turned from +the search of his friends to dispose of his lifelong enemy. + +As Marquis' foe went to the ground, a second German sprang forward and, +aiming a kick at the dog, also stooped and started to raise the colors. +Marquis, disregarding the kick, seized upon the flag with his teeth at +the same moment. + +Then came a tug of war. Snarling, and with bristling back, Marquis +pulled at the standard. Crying out hoarse epithets, the German pulled +also; but neither made any headway. + +Realizing that the dog was a match for him, the German uttered a fierce +imprecation, dropped his hold on the flag, stepped back and aimed his +revolver. + +But the dog was ready for him. He had released his hold upon the flag +almost as soon as had the German, and his canine reasoning told him the +German's object. Before the German could pull the trigger, Marquis was +ready for him, and hurled his body straight at the German's throat. + +He had gauged the distance accurately enough, and beneath the shock the +officer was hurled to the ground. He attempted to fight off his +four-footed assailant, but he was no match for the angry dog. + +This adversary disposed of, Marquis calmly returned to the flag, picked +it up in his mouth, carried it to the commander of the squadron and put +it in his hand. The commander took the time to pat Marquis on the head, +and utter some words of praise. + +But Marquis had no time to listen to these. He had other work to do, and +had disappeared almost before the Cossack ceased speaking. + +Hither and thither over the field of battle Marquis made his way, +sniffing the bodies of the dead, and licking the faces of the wounded. +For an hour he wandered about, and at last his search was rewarded. + +From near him came a feeble moan. Marquis pricked up his ears. Surely he +recognized that voice. The moan came again. Marquis hesitated no longer. +He had recognized the voice of Hal. Quickly he sprang to where the lad +lay and poked his cold muzzle into the boy's face. + +Hal turned feebly on his side and put out a hand before he realized what +had touched him. Then he succeeded in raising himself on one arm and +threw the other around Marquis' neck. + +"Marquis!" he almost sobbed. "Where is Chester?" + +Apparently the dog understood his question, for he jumped away and began +nosing other bodies nearby. And at last he came upon Chester. The latter +also was returning to consciousness. With some difficulty Hal staggered +to his feet and made his way to his friend's side. He turned to Marquis. + +"Get some water!" he commanded, and paused to see if the dog understood. + +Marquis bounded away, and returned a few moments later with a +well-filled canteen, in his mouth. Hastily Hal removed the stopper and +poured some of the water down Chester's throat. Then he took a drink +himself. + +Thus refreshed, Chester sat up and looked around. Hal did the same. It +was indeed a terrible sight that met their eyes. As far as they could +see, bodies of dead and wounded men lay scattered about. Hal shuddered. + +"Terrible!" he exclaimed. Then: "I wonder where Alexis is?" He turned to +Marquis. "Find Alexis," he commanded. + +Marquis understood and trotted away. Chester and Hal now arose and +walked slowly after him. At last Marquis, some distance away, set up a +loud bark. Hal and Chester approached as rapidly as their exhausted +condition would permit. + +Marquis was standing directly over the body of the giant Cossack, +surrounded by a circle of the enemies whom Alexis had slain in combat. + +The giant stirred slightly as the boys approached. Quickly Hal bent over +him and, raising his head upon his knee, placed the canteen to his lips. + +This brought a sigh from Alexis' lips, and soon he sat up and looked +around. + +"Well," said he, waving his arm toward the circle of his fallen foes, +"you can see what a Cossack does when he fights." + +"I see," said Hal briefly. "But come, if you are able to walk. We had +better get away from this spot. The battle is not over." + +Alexis objected. + +"What, a Cossack run!" he demanded. + +"But if we stay here we shall probably be killed," replied Chester. +"See," pointing, "even now the Cossacks are retreating in the face of +superior numbers. We must go." + +"I don't----" began Alexis, but Hal interrupted him. + +"Come on," he said, taking him by the arm. "Let's move away from here." + +Grumbling and protesting, the giant allowed himself to be led toward the +head of the Cossack line, now some distance back. Bullets and shells +were still whistling overhead, for the three were between the opposing +forces. None dropped near them, however, and they continued on their +way. + +Suddenly, from the German line, came the clear call of a bugle. + +"Quick!" shouted Hal, hurrying forward. "The Germans are going to +charge. We mustn't be caught in between." + +But it was too late. Even as the lad spoke, the German cavalry came +forward with a rush. + +Hal realized in an instant that they would not have time to rejoin the +main body of Cossacks, for should the latter advance to meet the charge, +they would not do so rapidly enough to come up to them before the +Germans. Should the Cossacks retreat, the three could not possibly hope +to come up with them. + +Fortunately the three were at the extreme east of the battle line; so +now, turning quickly, Hal led the way out of danger. When far enough +away so that there was little likelihood of being struck by stray +bullets, they halted to witness the progress of the battle. + +The Cossacks advanced to meet the charge of the German cavalry, and +threw it back upon its infantry support, which once more issued from the +trenches. German field guns were unlimbered and hurled their shells +screeching at the Russians. The latter were forced to retreat. + +The Germans pushed this advantage closely. + +"If we only had infantry or artillery here," groaned Alexis, "there +would be a different story to tell." + +"I'm sure of that," replied Hal; "but to advance in the face of such +overwhelming numbers would be foolish." + +"True," said Alexis, "but I never like to see a Cossack run from his +foes, no matter what their number." + +It was plain now that the Russian commander realized the futility of +further fighting with his vastly superior foe. The Cossacks gave way +more rapidly and finally turned and began their retreat upon Lodz. + +"And here we are right in the middle of the Germans," said Chester. +"What are we going to do?" + +"We'll have to try to get back to our lines," said Hal, "and the sooner +we start the better." + +"Good," said Chester. "Let's start at once." + +Alexis had so far recovered now as to announce that he was feeling +"perfectly fit," and making a slight detour, the three friends, closely +followed by Marquis, set out. + +They had progressed possibly half a mile, when Marquis suddenly began to +growl. + +"What do you suppose is the matter with him?" demanded Chester. + +"I don't know," replied Hal. "Evidently he scents some kind of danger." +He turned to the dog. "What is it, Marquis?" he demanded. + +Marquis' only answer was a series of deep growls. + +"Germans?" asked Hal. + +Marquis uttered a short bark. + +"That's what's the matter," said Hal, quietly. + +At that moment there came riding down a nearby road a troop of German +cavalry. + +"Quick! down on the ground!" cried Hal. "Perhaps they won't see us!" + +He suited the action to the word, and Chester and Alexis followed his +example. + +But it was too late. The Germans had espied them and now came toward +them at a gallop. Alexis rose to his feet and stretched. + +"Another fight," he said. "Good!" + +"Fight nothing!" exclaimed Hal. "It's impossible. They have us. That's +all there is about it. We shall have to submit." + +The Germans came to a sudden halt a few feet away, and rifles were +brought to bear upon the three friends. + +"You are our prisoners!" called the German commander. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +GERMANY'S NAPOLEON. + + +Hal raised his hands in token of surrender. + +"There is no help for it," he said to his two friends in an undertone. + +The German commander motioned the three to approach. They did so. + +"You will each climb up behind one of my men," ordered the German +leader. + +Hal and Chester did as ordered, but when Alexis approached one of the +German horsemen the latter eyed him dubiously. + +"Man!" he exclaimed. "You can't ride with me. You would break this horse +in two." + +The officer turned to the soldier. + +"Give your horse to the prisoner," he commanded, "and you climb up +behind the man nearest you." + +The soldier did as commanded, and a moment later Alexis also was in the +saddle. Then the little troop got under way again, headed for the German +lines. + +There was no conversation as the little troop rode along, and at length +they were well inside the German trenches. Here, after some delay, the +three prisoners were conducted before General von Hindenburg, the Teuton +commander in the East, a man of kindly face and courteous bearing, the +man whose successes, brief though they were, earned him the name of "The +German Napoleon." + +"How comes it," asked General von Hindenburg of Hal, "that you two +American lads are fighting with the Russians? How comes it that two lads +born and reared in a civilized country have espoused the cause of the +barbarians?" + +"In the first place," answered Hal boldly, "I do not consider the +Russians barbarians. In the next place, we joined the Allies when the +Germans ravaged Belgium." + +"Ravaged!" exclaimed the German commander with some heat. + +"Exactly," said Hal. "We joined the Belgian army before Liege, and we +hold commissions in the Belgian army. We were also attached for a time +to the British forces under Sir John French. We bore communications from +Sir John French to Grand Duke Nicholas, that is how we happen to be +here." + +"And how did you carry these dispatches, may I ask?" inquired General +von Hindenburg. + +"By airship," replied Hal briefly. + +"What!" cried the general. "You flew over Germany in an airship?" + +"Well, only part of it," replied Hal with a grin; and seeing no harm, he +told the German commander of their adventures after being captured and +taken to Berlin. + +"You are brave lads," said the general calmly, when Hal had finished. "I +would that Germany had more like you. But I fear your fighting days are +over." + +"What will you do with us, General?" asked Chester, who up to this time +had remained silent, Hal usually acting as spokesman when there was +explaining to be done. + +"You will be sent to Posen," replied the general, "where you will be +detained until after the war." + +"But that may be for years, General," protested Hal, trying to draw the +general out. + +In this he was successful. + +"You are mistaken," replied General von Hindenburg calmly. "The war will +be over within the next six months. Germany will have conquered." + +Hal did not reply, for he had no mind to antagonize the general; but he +had his own ideas as to the ultimate outcome of the war. + +The general now summoned one of his staff, and turned the lads over to +the latter with this injunction: + +"Have them sent to Posen. Instruct Commander Friech that they must be +well guarded, but treated with kindness." + +He bowed gravely to both lads, who saluted and followed the other +officer from the German commander's quarters. + +"You will remain in my quarters until to-night," said the officer to the +three friends, "and you probably will start on your journey about +midnight. There is a detachment leaving about that time." + +He conducted the three and the dog to his tent, where their wounds were +dressed and a guard was stationed over them. Then they were left to +themselves. + +Alexis, who up to this time had not spoken, at last opened his mouth. + +"What's this all about?" he demanded. "I can't understand this +outlandish gibberish. What's it all about, anyhow?" + +The conversation between the lads and the German officers had been in +English. + +Chester broke into a laugh. + +"Outlandish gibberish!" he exclaimed. "Why, Alexis, if you only knew how +your native tongue sounds, you wouldn't call anything gibberish. It's +fortunate you speak German." + +"Well, perhaps so," Alexis agreed. "But what's it all about?" + +"Simply," said Hal, "that we are to be taken to Posen, where we will be +held prisoners till after the war." + +Alexis uttered a loud Russian imprecation. + +"I was in hope," he said, "that when I went into East Prussia it would +be as part of an army too big for the Germans ever to drive out." + +"It can't be helped now," said Chester briefly. + +"It would have been helped if you had let me fight when I wanted to," +said the big Cossack regretfully. + +All day long the three were kept close inside the tent. Not once were +they permitted to step into the open. Night fell, and food was placed +before them. They were almost famished, so they ate heartily, sharing +their meal with Marquis. It was well along toward midnight when the +German officer once more entered the tent and informed them it was time +for them to leave. + +They followed the officer into the open air, where a large body of men +were ready to move. Quickly they were led to horses, and were soon in +the saddle. Then, closely guarded, they were led away at a swift trot. + +The German camp was some miles from the nearest railroad station, and it +took several hours to cover this distance. At last, however, they were +conducted aboard a train, where, under heavy guard, they continued their +journey. + +It was well along toward the next evening when the train, after many +stops, finally pulled into Posen. With a number of other prisoners, the +three friends and Marquis, who had been allowed to accompany them, were +taken from the train and turned over to another squad of troops. In the +center of these they were led to a large and massive castle at one end +of the town. Here they were thrust into a dark though well-appointed +room, which, their guard informed them, was to be their prison. + +"So this is where we are to spend the next few years, eh?" said Chester. + +"The outlook is not very bright," replied Hal, "but we shall have to +make the best of a bad situation." + +The three began a careful survey of their prison. There were two large +windows in the room, looking out into a little court. Through these a +dim light streamed. The windows were heavily barred. Hal and Chester +tested the bars. Alexis, however, after one look, sat down in deep +disgust. If his wounds bothered him any, he did not seem to mind them. + +"No chance of escape here," said Hal, after shaking one of the heavy +iron bars. + +"I should say not," agreed Chester, after making a test. + +They turned from the windows just as a key grated in the lock of the +heavy door, and a man of huge stature, topping the giant frame of Alexis +by more than an inch, entered the room. + +"Good evening," he said politely enough. "I have come to see if you +require anything. We have been instructed to treat you kindly." + +"A little liberty is about all," said Hal, with a rueful smile. + +"I am sorry," replied the newcomer, also smiling slightly, "but that is +the one thing I cannot grant you. I suppose you wonder who I am?" + +The boys nodded. + +"I," said the newcomer, striking himself a hard blow on the chest, "am +Freiderich von Bernstrum, brother of Heinrich von Bernstrum, commander +of this fortress, and I am kept cooped up here while there is fighting +to be done--me, Freiderich von Bernstrum, a real fighter!" + +"Hm-m-m," muttered Hal to himself as he glanced keenly at Alexis. "Two +of a kind." + +Alexis moved restlessly as the big German made this boast. It was plain +to both lads that, while he might like to brag himself, he did not +relish hearing another do so. + +"Yes," continued von Bernstrum, "I would go to the front. But my +brother, he would stay here. You see," and the talkative German leaned +closer to the lads, "he has a fair captive in the tower above, and he +seeks to marry her." + +"And who is she?" demanded Hal. + +"I will mention no names," replied the German. "Enough that she is a +Russian countess." + +Alexis jumped to his feet and advanced upon the big German. + +"You have dared to lay a hand upon a Russian lady?" he demanded. + +The German eyed him amusedly. + +"And what of it?" he demanded. "However, you need have no fear. She +prefers me, and I shall take her away from him." + +Alexis raised a threatening hand, but Hal stayed him. + +"Quiet," he whispered. "Some good may come of this if you obey me." + +Alexis subsided. + +Hal approached Chester and whispered. + +"Keep von Bernstrum in conversation while I have a word with Alexis." + +Chester did as Hal ordered, and the latter whispered to the big Cossack: + +"Do you think you can whip this man?" pointing to von Bernstrum. + +Alexis' fingers twitched. + +"Remember you are wounded, Alexis." + +"Try me," he said simply. + +"Keep quiet, then, and do as I tell you," said Hal. + +He turned again to von Bernstrum. + +"I can see," he said, "that the lady would be pleased to know a man like +you." + +"Ah! you see it?" cried the German. "But Heinrich is so cunning. Now if +I had your help----" + +"What would you have us do?" asked Hal. + +The big German was silent for some minutes before replying. + +"If I had your help," he said at length, "I would see that you all +regained your liberty. Will you help me?" + +"What is it you would have us do?" asked Chester. + +"I will not say until you have promised," said von Bernstrum. + +"And we will not promise till you have told us," said Hal. "How do we +know that you are a man of your word, or that you are a fighter, such as +you would have us believe." + +"What! Freiderich von Bernstrum not a fighter!" exclaimed the big German +in surprise. + +"We have only your word for it," said Hal quietly. + +Von Bernstrum paced up and down excitedly. He stopped suddenly. + +"Let me bring swords!" he exclaimed, "and you shall see whether I can +fight!" + +He made as if to leave the room. + +"Not so fast!" exclaimed Hal. "The clash of steel would bring the whole +fortress down on us. But I shall try you out." + +"How?" exclaimed the German eagerly. + +"Alexis!" called Hal. + +The big Cossack approached. + +"Here," said Hal to the German, pointing to Alexis, "is a foeman worthy +of your steel. You shall try with him." + +"Good!" exclaimed von Bernstrum. "With fists?" + +"No," replied Hal, who was somewhat doubtful of Alexis' prowess in the +fistic art. "How about a wrestling match?" + +"Good!" exclaimed von Bernstrum again. "But I assure you I am his +superior." He turned to Alexis. "Get ready, man!" + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +THE ESCAPE. + + +Alexis made ready. + +Hal realized that he was taking a desperate chance to put through the +scheme that had entered his mind. Not only was von Bernstrum a bigger +man than Alexis, but the latter had lost much blood only 36 hours +before. Doubtless also he knew every trick of a wrestler or fighter. + +Alexis took off his shoes and threw them into a corner, and divested +himself of his coat. Von Bernstrum growled like a dog as he followed the +Cossack's example. + +Alexis held out his hand. Von Bernstrum gripped it hard and gave a grunt +of satisfaction. + +"A man's hand," he exclaimed. + +Alexis placed his right hand across the German's shoulders and caught +him firmly and the boys saw by the expression on his face that he was +not certain of the outcome. The German had not boasted in vain. He was +indeed a giant. + +"If ever men felt the joy of battle, these two do," exclaimed Hal to +Chester. + +The two men were now gripped in a tight embrace. Von Bernstrum felt +Alexis over carefully, but gave him no opening. + +"A man's chest," he grunted. + +Alexis so far had uttered no word. Now he perceived that his opponent +was preparing for the loin throw and prepared himself to meet it. When +he had foiled this attack, he held his opponent for a moment at a +disadvantage. + +Alexis gripped von Bernstrum for a hug. Had the German been a weaker +man, his ribs must have cracked; but he had caught deep breath, and the +Cossack might as well have tried to crush a tree. + +"A good try!" muttered the German. + +He now tested Alexis sorely. He tried a cross hitch, but failed. At +this, a smile broke out on Alexis' face. + +Both lads, who had been watching the struggle nervously, now grew +confident. It was evident that the Cossack hoped for victory. + +At last Alexis saw his chance. In getting the grip he wanted, it was +necessary for him to face the danger of putting himself in his +opponent's power; but the Cossack ventured to do this, for he realized +that by no other means could he throw him. Von Bernstrum saw his +opponent's move and took advantage of it, and for a moment Alexis was +afraid it was all over with him. + +But he still held his ground. Von Bernstrum's grip grew weaker at last, +and the boys could hear him panting like a dog. Hal spoke to Chester. + +"I believe he realizes that Alexis will master him," he exclaimed in a +whisper. + +Chester nodded in assent. + +Now Alexis put all the strength of his mighty shoulders, back and loins +into a mighty heave, and Freiderich von Bernstrum, giant though he was, +went flying across the room, his head striking the floor with a terrible +thud. + +For a moment the lads were afraid Alexis had killed him; but for a +moment only. Calmly Alexis put on his shoes and donned his coat. Then he +turned to his young friends and waited. His attitude said as plain as +words: + +"I have done the fighting. You do the rest." + +Quickly Hal stooped over the fallen man and took a bunch of keys from +his pocket. Then, straightening up, he approached the door, opened it +and peered out. There was no one in sight. + +Hal turned to Alexis. + +"Change clothes with him," he whispered, motioning to the fallen German. + +Hastily Alexis obeyed. In spite of the fact that von Bernstrum was +almost two inches taller than Alexis, the height of the latter was so +great that Hal believed the difference would not be noticed. + +The lad now relieved von Bernstrum of his revolvers. Alexis had donned +his adversary's sword with his uniform. Then once more Hal approached +the door and peered out. Then he spoke to Alexis. + +"We will go with you as though we were your prisoners," he explained. +"If anyone accosts us, we may have to fight. However, I believe you look +enough like von Bernstrum to avoid detection. Pull the hat well over +your face, and if anyone asks where you are going, reply that you are +taking the prisoners to the commandant. Do you understand?" + +Alexis signified that he did, and quietly the three, still followed by +Marquis, left the room. Along the same passageways they had traversed +Hal guided Alexis by a touch of the hand, for the lad's sense of +direction was much better than that of the giant Cossack. + +At last they came into the open and started toward the gate. So far they +had not been accosted. At the gate a soldier approached Alexis and +saluted. + +"Are you going out, sir?" he demanded. + +"Yes," replied the Cossack, mimicking von Bernstrum's voice as best he +could. "These prisoners have given me their parole, and I am taking them +out for a breath of air. Get me two more horses." + +The soldier saluted and turned away. Hal addressed Alexis. + +"You are doing beautifully," he exclaimed. "I didn't know you were such +a strategist." + +"Why," exclaimed Alexis, "next to being a fighter I am a strategist. I +remember one time----" + +"Save it for some other time," said Hal. + +"If you don't believe----" began the big Cossack, somewhat crestfallen. + +"Never mind now," broke in Chester. "We have other things to do." + +Alexis subsided, grumbling. A few moments later the soldier reappeared +leading three horses. Alexis took all three bridles, and bade the +soldier begone, which order the latter obeyed in a hurry. + +Quickly the three friends leaped into the saddle, and started off at a +rapid trot, riding eastward. Out of sight of the town, they bore off +slightly to the North, for, as Hal said, they did not wish to run right +into the German army advancing on Lodz. + +They had proceeded perhaps a mile out of sight of the castle, when Hal +suddenly checked his mount, and raised a warning hand. All stopped to +listen. From the direction in which they had just come, came the +frenzied tolling of a great bell, followed by a few faint shots. + +"They have learned of our escape," said Hal quietly. "That, I imagine, +is a warning to the countryside to be on the lookout for us." + +All three put spurs to their horses, and set off again at a gallop. For +two hours they kept up this swift pace, and then Alexis drew rein. + +"Unless I want this horse to drop under me," he said, "we shall have to +slow down. There is no horse living that can carry me at that gait very +long." + +The boys did not doubt this, and they continued their journey at a more +leisurely pace. Finally, rounding a turn in the road, they came upon a +little stream, perhaps a hundred yards wide. There was no bridge. + +"Guess we shall have to make our horses swim it," said Chester. + +Accordingly all plunged into the stream, Marquis swimming behind, and +soon reached the opposite shore. Here they drew up in a clump of bushes +and sat down to dry off a bit. + +"Do you suppose they know which way we came?" asked Hal of Chester. + +"I don't know. However, I suppose they will search in all directions, +and they are bound to come upon us sooner or later if we linger around +here." + +"You are right. I guess we had better move." + +Soon the little party was in the saddle again, and making off at a rapid +trot. Hal, for some unaccountable reason turning suddenly in his saddle, +uttered an ejaculation. + +"What's the matter?" demanded Chester. + +"Look!" said Hal, pointing back toward the little stream. + +Alexis and Chester followed the direction of Hal's finger. Just plunging +into the stream were half a dozen horsemen, and it was plain from that +distance that they were German soldiers, and that they had made out the +forms of the fugitives. + +The three friends put spurs to their horses and, with Marquis loping +along behind, soon lost themselves in a little woods. Here they urged +their tired horses on, and at last came to a small open space. This they +crossed before Alexis' horse gave out and went to the ground in a heap. + +"I am afraid it's all off," exclaimed Hal. "How far do you suppose we +are from the German border, Alexis?" + +"Not far," answered the Cossack. "Besides, some of our troops have been +operating in these parts. They were only small detachments, and most of +them have been driven off; but even now there may be some of them near." + +Alexis urged the two lads to ride on and leave him, but this they +refused to do. Therefore they dismounted and, turning their horses +loose, they continued their journey on foot. + +As they walked along a man suddenly popped out from among the trees, +brought his revolver to bear upon the trio, and in a loud tone cried: + +"Halt!" + +Alexis gave one quick glance at the man's uniform, uttered a cry of +pleasure and spoke a few quick words in his native tongue. The lads were +surprised to see the man drop his rifle, throw his arms about Alexis and +embrace him. + +For some moments after quitting this embrace the two talked in Russian, +the lads being able to pick up only a few words. Then Alexis turned to +the two lads. + +"My brother," he said simply. "He belongs to a detachment of Cossacks +who raided in these parts two weeks ago. The detachment was surrounded +by Germans, he tells me, and practically annihilated. About 150 men +escaped to the woods, where they have been conducting a guerilla +warfare, picking off the Germans one at a time, wherever they happen to +find one alone, or in pairs, or small parties. These Cossacks are +scattered all through the woods, and to get them together would be +almost impossible." + +"Then how are they able to tell friend from foe?" + +"You see that large green leaf my brother wears in his hat?" + +"Yes." + +"That is their emblem." + +Alexis' brother approached and spoke in German. + +"Come," he said. "I shall show you something." + +He led the way into the woods, and approached a large tree, where he +pointed to a placard tacked on it. The placard read: + +"All Russians at large in these woods are ordered to assemble at this +spot the 10th of this month without arms and surrender, under penalty of +death." + +"That was posted two weeks ago," said Alexis' brother, "and this is the +20th. Read our answer below it." + +The answer read: + +"Come and take us!" + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +GUERILLA WARFARE. + + +"Do you mean?" asked Hal, "that 150 men, at large in these woods, have +defied the whole German army?" + +"There are less than a hundred now," replied the brother of Alexis, +whose name the lads learned was Stephan. "We have been conducting this +guerilla warfare for more than two weeks now, and we have done +inestimable harm to the Germans. We have evaded large bodies of troops +sent out to kill or capture us. Of course, some of our men have been +picked off, but we are not going to run yet." + +"But how do you live?" demanded Chester. + +"We have been living on roots and herbs," was the reply, "and such other +food as we have been able to take from the enemy." + +"And where do you sleep?" + +"This forest," said Stephan, "makes an ideal hiding place. It is filled +with large caves, the presence of which seems to be unknown to the foe. +Many of the caves are large enough for twenty men, although it is seldom +that there are more than five or six men in one at a time." + +From the rear came the sound of galloping horses. Stephan sprang to +instant action. + +"Come with me," he cried, and led the way into the very thick of the +forest. + +Hal, Chester, Alexis and Marquis followed him and soon were safe from +discovery in a large cave, the mouth of which was screened from view by +a dense mass of shrubbery. + +Outside, after a few minutes, the lads could hear the sounds of moving +horses and the exclamations of their riders. The horsemen halted near +the entrance to the cave and held a consultation. + +"They have probably fallen in with some of these guerillas," said one +voice. "If so, we shall have hard work to find them." + +Close upon his words came a scream from outside, and straining their +ears, the party inside made out the sound of a distant pistol shot. + +"One more gone," said Stephan briefly. + +There came a volley from outside the cave, as the Germans fired at their +unseen assailant. + +"Not much chance of their hitting anybody," said Stephan calmly. + +From outside the cave came the sound of rapidly retreating hoofbeats. +The Germans were moving away. Alexis, having thus quickly learned the +way of the guerillas, cautiously poked his head from the cave, reached +back and picked up his brother's rifle, and fired after the retreating +foe. + +"Another one," he said grimly, returning the weapon to Stephan. + +"Just how long do you suppose you can keep this work up?" Chester asked +of Stephan. + +"Not much longer, I am afraid," was the reply. "I figure it is only a +question of days now until the Germans send out a force strong enough to +search the woods thoroughly. In that event, we shall try to make our way +back over the border to safety." + +From a corner of the cave Stephan now produced a small quantity of food, +which he set out. All fell to and it was soon disposed of. Then they +ventured from the cave and, walking slowly, made their way northward. + +"It's just a case of keep moving," Stephan explained. "Of course, it +might be possible for us to join forces, but then we should greatly +lessen our effectiveness." + +Alexis, who was in front, stopped suddenly and threw up a warning hand. +Immediately the other three halted in their tracks. Peering in the +direction in which Alexis pointed, they made out the forms of half a +dozen German soldiers standing near a tree. Directly, however, the +latter made off, and the little party approached the tree. + +"Another placard, eh?" muttered Stephan, as he drew near. + +The other three also approached and read: + +"The time for surrender has been extended till to-morrow at noon!" + +Angrily, Stephan snatched the placard from the tree. Turning, he saw +several other trees also bearing placards. These he also tore down. + +"Surrender, eh!" he cried. "Never!" + +Suddenly he clapped his hand to his side and staggered back. At the same +instant, from directly ahead, came the sharp crack of a rifle. But +Stephan did not fall. Recovering himself, he dashed straight in the +direction of the shot at top speed. There came the second crack of a +rifle, but still the Cossack did not pause. + +Now Hal, and Chester, dashing after him with Alexis at their side, saw +Stephan pause momentarily, raise his rifle and fire quickly twice. Then +he dropped to the ground. But it was not from injury, as the others +feared, for at that moment there came a volley and bullets whistled +overhead. Quickly Hal, Chester and Alexis also flung themselves to the +earth. + +Stephan, lying upon his stomach, was pumping lead steadily straight +before him. Hal, Chester and Alexis drew their revolvers and joined in +the fray. Through the trees they could now make out the number of their +assailants. There were an even dozen of them, all lying in a little +clearing, their rifles trained upon the spot where the four friends lay. + +Under the deadly aim of Stephan's rifle, two men dropped to the ground. +The others returned the Cossack's fire, but the latter was well +protected by foliage, and escaped injury. Another German jumped to his +feet, spun round on his heel, and fell to the ground. + +Then, at a word from one of the Germans, the remaining nine jumped +suddenly to their feet and dashed toward their enemies on a dead run, +their rifles spitting fire as they came on. Exposed to the fire of the +foe as they were, they realized that their only chance of life lay in +rushing their opponents. + +Alexis was the first to see the danger in this attack. He jumped to his +feet, dragging Hal and Chester with him. Stephan also was up in an +instant. + +"Quick!" cried Alexis, and at a rapid run, he urged the lads to another +secluded spot. + +There, as the Germans appeared in the spot where they had stood a few +moments before, Stephan, the only one of the four armed with a rifle, +fired three more quick shots at the foe. One tumbled forward on his +face, and a second dropped his rifle. + +And now unexpected aid came to the four friends. From the rear of the +Germans came several rifle shots in quick succession, and two more of +the enemy bit the dust. As they turned to face this new attack, Stephan +stepped forward and opened on them again. Caught thus between two fires, +the Germans fought well, firing blindly at their unseen foes on both +sides. + +But such a struggle could have but one ending. The Cossacks, screened +from the fire of the enemy who lay between them, were practically safe +from the German fire, at the same time having the Germans at their +mercy. No quarter was asked, nor none was given. Soon a heap of fallen +bodies marked the spot where the Germans had made their last stand. + +From the other side of the Germans, two Cossacks now stepped forth, and +approached. Stephan advanced to meet them. Alexis made his way to the +fallen foe, and gathered up the rifles. Returning, he passed one to each +lad, with the remark: + +"Here; these beat revolvers for this kind of warfare." + +After a short conference with the two newcomers, Stephan motioned for +his friends to follow, and the party, now increased to six, moved on. +For perhaps half an hour they marched through the woods, and at the end +of that time stopped once more before the entrance to a second cave. + +"Before we enter," said Stephan, "I will tell you that these men have +just informed me that inside a consultation of war is being held. There +are perhaps 60 men there, who have gathered here for that purpose. I +have vouched for you, and you will therefore be admitted to the +consultation without question." + +The others signified that they understood, and Stephan led the way into +the cave. Inside, the lads looked quickly around. This cave, they saw, +was much greater than the first they had entered. Also it showed signs +of human handiwork. Large pillars ran up through the center of it, and +beyond the far entrance the lads could see one, then two more +compartments. + +Sitting about on the floor of the first compartment were more than half +a hundred men, talking in low tones. They looked up in surprise at the +sight of Hal and Chester, but Alexis they greeted with a nod. The latter +stepped forward and greeted them in their native tongue. The lads could +not make out all he said, but the looks of suspicion on the faces of +some vanished immediately, and they moved a bit to let the newcomers +join the circle. + +Plainly it was the opinion of most of the men that the guerilla warfare +had been carried far enough. Some were in favor of making a last +desperate raid upon the enemy before attempting to get back across the +Russian border, while others were in favor of attempting to get back +immediately. + +For an hour the discussion waged and then it was rudely interrupted. The +man left to guard the entrance to the cavern rushed in. + +"Germans approaching in great force!" he cried. + +Immediately all were on their feet, and one man rushed to the narrow +entrance. He started through but fell back, a bullet in his head. A +second, rifle in hand, also advanced, but Hal, springing quickly to his +feet, stopped him. + +"Wait!" he cried. "They can pick us off one at a time as we go out. Some +other plan will have to be found." + +Stephan and Alexis took their stand by the lad's side, and faced the men +who would have rushed to certain death. + +"The lad is right," said Stephan. "Out the other end of the cave, men, +and scatter!" + +Rapidly this order was obeyed, and soon none were left in the first +compartment but Hal, Chester, Alexis, Stephan and Marquis. + +Now Hal also dashed after the others. But the lad was not bent upon +flight, leaving his friends to face the enemy alone. Quickly he hurried +through the three compartments of the cavern, casting a keen eye here +and there. Clear to the far entrance he went, and then turned back. As +he made his way along, he stumbled over something and fell heavily. He +was up in a moment, however, and glanced curiously at the object over +which he had tripped. Then a smile lighted up his face. He made his way +back to his friends. + +"How many do you suppose there are out there?" asked Alexis. + +"We have no means of telling," replied Chester. "However, there are +probably no less than two or three hundred." + +"If we stand here and fire as they attempt to enter, we may have some +success," said Stephan. + +"Yes," said Alexis, "but the detonations may occasion the falling in of +the cavern. At the first shot from outside a piece of falling rock +grazed my shoulder." + +"We must do something quickly," said Hal. "We cannot leave without +striking at least one blow at them." + +"Assuredly not," agreed Alexis. "I have a plan." + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +THE MIGHT OF ALEXIS. + + +"What is it?" demanded all eagerly. + +"We will retreat to the second compartment," said the giant, "and I will +place myself behind the pillar, which I can see from here." He stooped +and picked up a long heavy iron bar from the ground. "I will have this +for my weapon, and invisible in the darkness, if they come in a rush, I +can let my bar fall upon their skulls thirty times a minute." + +"Good!" cried Hal, "and at the same time I have another plan. The rest +of us shall retreat to the third compartment, leaving Alexis, for the +moment, to deal with the foe alone. But Alexis, when I say retreat, you +must leave your post and come to the third compartment. Is it agreed?" + +"Agreed!" cried the giant. + +"All right, then. To your post!" + +Quickly the four retreated to the second compartment, where Alexis took +up his post behind the large pillar, concealed from view by the +narrowness of the entrance between the compartments themselves. The +others retreated to the third compartment. + +For a long time, it seemed to Alexis, he waited in silence. Then the +head of a man appeared through the entrance to his compartment and came +toward him. There were more heads behind him. + +"Strike, Alexis!" came Hal's voice from the next compartment. + +The giant obeyed. The iron bar rose and fell full upon the head of the +first man, who dropped without a cry. Ten times in almost as many +seconds the huge iron bar rose and fell again and not once did it fail +to find its mark. + +The German soldiers could see nothing; they heard sighs and groans; they +stumbled over dead bodies, but as they did not realize the cause of all +this, they still came forward. So far there had not been a sound to tell +those behind what was transpiring in front. + +But now an officer, bearing a torch, approached. On arriving at the +entrance to the compartment where Alexis had exterminated all that had +come, he drew back in terror; but his retreat was blocked by those +pressing on from behind. The officer saw the heap of dead, but as yet he +had not discerned the cause. + +Suddenly a gigantic hand issued from nowhere and clutched him by the +throat. A second later the captain fell close to the now extinguished +torch, adding another body to the heap of dead. All this was effected as +mysteriously as if by magic. Another officer, unable to account for the +pile of dead, cried to the men behind him: + +"Fire!" + +A volley rang out, and for a moment the cavern was lighted as if by day. +But none was hit. From behind him Alexis now heard the sound of Hal's +voice. + +"Come back quickly!" whispered the lad. + +The giant obeyed instantly, and glided softly through the door to the +third compartment. Hal took him by the arm and led him to the side of +the room, where he showed him the object over which he had stumbled when +in the compartment a few moments before. It was a barrel of powder. + +"Alexis," said Hal, "you will take this barrel, the fuse of which I am +going to light, and hurl it at our enemy. Can you do it?" + +Alexis stooped over the barrel, weighing fully seventy pounds. He lifted +it easily with one hand. + +"Light it," he said briefly. + +"Throw it right in among them," explained Hal. + +"Light it," repeated Alexis. + +Hal did so, and the giant, picking up the barrel, advanced to the door +of the compartment. Beyond he could hear the confused shouts of many +men, as they in vain sought to explain the death of their companions. + +Alexis blew on the fuse, that it might burn quicker. + +And now, by the light of the sparkling fuse, the enemy made out his +form. They saw the barrel he held in his hand; they understood what was +going to happen. + +A cry of terror arose. Some attempted to fly; officers cried out to +Alexis that they would spare him if he would extinguish the fuse. Others +commanded their men to fire; but the latter were too terrified to do so. + +Now the arm of the giant swung round. There passed through the air the +train of fire, like a falling star. The barrel fell into the midst of +the terrified German soldiers. Immediately Alexis dashed for the far end +of the cavern, just outside which his friends now stood. + +Then, from inside the second compartment came the terrible thunder of +the explosion, blowing the cavern to pieces, hurling men to death by the +force of its shock, falling stones crushing out the life of many more. + +Alexis dashed for the open air, where his friends stood awaiting him, a +happy smile on his face at the success of his exploit. Three more paces +and he would be free of the cavern--two more. And right at the exit, a +heavy piece of rock, sent hurling in the air by the explosion, fell upon +him--striking him upon the shoulder--bearing him to the +ground--pinioning him beneath it. + +And at the same instant the walls of the cavern began to give. Chester, +realizing what was happening, sprang into the mouth of the cave, closely +followed by Hal and Stephan. Now, under the massive rock, Alexis +stirred. In spite of the great weight upon him, he turned slowly under +it, until it rested squarely upon his back. Then stretching his hands +out before him, he rose to his knees balancing the rock upon his back. +Then he straightened up, and the rock tumbled from him with a terrible +crash. He turned, and with his friends, dashed from the cave. + +They had not escaped a second too soon. + +There was a terrible rending sound, the crunching of rock against rock, +and slowly the walls of the cavern gave; then fell inward with a fearful +crash. + +Some distance from the cavern the four stopped running. Hal wiped the +moisture from his brow. + +"A close call and no mistake," he said weakly. + +Chester grasped Alexis by the hand. + +"I thought you were done for," he exclaimed. + +Alexis grinned. + +"Can't kill me that way," he said. "What's a little rock like that? It +was play for me to lift it." + +"Maybe so," replied Chester, "but even now, I can scarcely believe what +I saw." + +"Why," said Alexis, "I could have lifted that rock with one hand. It was +child's play. Now I can still remember one great feat I accomplished. It +was in St. Petersburg--Petrograd now, by the grace of God and the Czar. +There is a little stream runs through the city. Over this there is a +bridge. I was passing along one day, when I saw that the bridge, having +been weakened in the middle, was about to fall. Well, there was no one +on it, so that would have been all right. But, dashing down the street +was an ambulance. The woman in it was very ill. It was absolutely +necessary that she be taken across the bridge at once. At the bridge the +driver was held up. The guard would not allow the ambulance to cross. It +was too dangerous. But delay meant death for the lady. I leaped into a +small boat and was quickly under the middle of the bridge. The bridge +was low, and by standing I could just touch it. I put my two hands under +the bridge and braced it while the ambulance crossed. I was sorely +tested, but I held out. I account that one of my greatest feats." + +"And so you should," said Hal dryly. + +"But," demanded Stephan, who was greatly interested in his brother's +wonderful narrative, "how is it, that with all that weight resting upon +you, and you standing in a boat, the boat didn't sink? I can't +understand how, with that weight upon it, it remained afloat." + +"Why," said Alexis with perfect gravity, "I forgot to mention that the +stream was very shallow--in fact it could be waded. The boat was forced +down by the great weight until it rested on the bottom. In that way, it +was perfectly simple." + +"I see," exclaimed Stephan. "A wonderful feat, truly!" + +"Was the bridge made out of rubber?" asked Chester, laughing to himself. + +"Rubber?" repeated Alexis. "No; it was a wooden bridge." + +"Then," said Chester, "how do you account for the fact that it stretched +so when the boat went to the bottom of the stream?" + +"I didn't say it stretched," said Alexis. + +"I know you didn't say so," grinned Chester; "but it must have stretched +unless it broke in two." + +Alexis looked aggrieved. + +"If you don't believe me----" he began. + +"I wouldn't dispute you for the world," said Chester. "I just wondered." + +Alexis would have replied, but at that instant his hat was lifted from +his head, and all four became aware of the distant sound of a shot. +Quickly all dropped to the ground, but they were not quick enough to go +unscathed. A bullet struck Stephan in the arm, and he dropped it to his +side with a cry. + +Instantly Alexis was all anxiety. He jumped to his brother's side. + +"Are you much hurt, Stephan?" he asked tenderly, taking the injured arm +in his hand. + +"Just a scratch," replied Stephan. "I'll be all right." + +Nevertheless Alexis would not rest until he had bound up the wound with +his handkerchief. In the meantime, from their positions on the ground, +the others had been popping away at the enemy. Several rounds of shots +were exchanged but none of the four friends was hit again. The enemy was +so far away that the lads could not tell whether or not their fire was +effective. + +Bullets began to drop closely about them, in their exposed position. +Also they fell oftener now, indicating that the force opposed to them +was numerically superior. + +"Great Scott!" exclaimed Hal, as his hat seemed to leap suddenly from +his head. "We'll have to get away from here. This is too close for +comfort." + +"You bet," said Chester. "Now when I say the word we'll all jump to our +feet and make a dash for those trees in the distance." + +At the word, the four sprang to their feet, and not even waiting to take +a parting shot at the enemy, dashed away as fast as their feet would +carry them. Hal took the lead, and behind him came Stephan, then Alexis +and then Chester. + +When Hal reached the trees, uninjured, he turned to speak to Chester. +What was his amazement and dismay to find that Chester was not there. At +that moment Alexis and Stephan dashed into the shelter. Hal glanced back +over the distance they had come. + +There lay Chester, in the open field. He had been struck down by a +German bullet, and even now the enemy, with a triumphant cry, was +charging down upon him. With a cry, Hal leaped forward, but the iron +hand of Alexis stayed him. + +"You stay here," said the giant. "I'll get him!" + +Discarding his rifle, he dashed forward in the very face of the +onrushing foe. Chester's life hung in the balance! + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +TWO TO THE RESCUE. + + +As friend and foe alike bore down on him, Hal saw Chester raise himself. +He got to his knees, struggled to his feet, staggered, and then fell +back again. + +The Germans rushing toward the lad numbered twenty--Hal counted them. +They were approaching the prostrate form of the lad as rapidly as they +could, afoot. But Alexis was nearer, and it was evident that he would +reach the lad first. + +The giant Cossack covered the intervening space with long bounds, going +at a speed of which Hal had not deemed him capable. + +And now, as he came close to Chester, a second form bounded after him. +There was a flash of a hairy body as Marquis leaped forward and set out +after Alexis. He came up with the latter before he reached Chester, and +they came to the lad's body together. + +In the meantime, Hal and Stephan kept up a steady fire with their +rifles, pouring a hail of bullets in the direction of the advancing +Germans. One man fell, but the others dashed on. + +At this point Hal made a startling discovery. The magazine of his weapon +was empty and he had not another cartridge. At the same moment Stephan +fired his last remaining shot. Hal sprang forward and seized the weapon +Alexis had thrown down when he dashed to Chester's aid. It was empty. +The lad uttered a cry of dismay, and turned his eyes. The two still had +their revolvers, but the distance was too great for a pistol bullet. + +Alexis, having reached Chester's side, knelt and raised the lad's head +to his knee. Hurriedly he drew his canteen and poured a little water +down his throat. Chester looked up into the Cossack's face and smiled +feebly. Alexis tried to place him upon his feet, but the lad was too +weak to stand. + +A fierce growl from Marquis, who had been standing guard over the two, +with bared fangs and bristling back, called Alexis to more serious work. +The Germans, apparently fearing nothing at the hands of one man, a +wounded boy and a dog, had come within fifty feet without firing a shot +at the trio. Now, as they approached closer, the leader of the band +called out: "You are my prisoners!" + +Without waiting to reply, Alexis leaped toward them. His sword flashed +from his scabbard and whirled aloft even as he jumped. He was among the +enemy before they realized what had happened. + +The suddenness of the giant's spring stood him in good stead. Before a +rifle or a revolver could be brought to bear on the huge form, Alexis +had come to such close quarters with his foes as to prevent the use of +firearms. The German leader did draw his revolver, but the melee was so +fierce and men were tangled up so that he was unable to fire for fear of +hitting one of his own men. + +To the right, to the left, and straight ahead darted the fiery sword of +the giant Cossack. The Germans gave back before the very savageness of +this attack, but Alexis kept close in among them, for while he was +fighting mad, he was still cool enough to realize that his hope of life +lay in his keeping in the center of the enemy. + +Before the thrust of the angry sword three men fell. The blades of the +others who encircled him hissed above his head, flashed by his side, but +his single weapon so far had formed a perfect barrier. Not a thrust or a +slash had passed it. Ten swords clashed against the giant's blade at +once. With a quick move, he swept them all aside, and with a quick +thrust disposed of another of the enemy. + +With a rapid spring forward he avoided the weapons that would have been +buried in his back by his foes in the rear, and sweeping his sword +around his head with such rapidity that he seemed a circle of fire, for +a moment he cleared a space around him. + +But in that instant the German officer brought his revolver to bear and +fired. + +Alexis had perceived this move out of the tail of his eye and, leaping +straight forward into the midst of the foe once more, escaped the +bullet. + +Whirling his sword about his head, the Cossack spun on his heel. The +guard of the German soldiers was not strong enough to ward off this +terrible blow. Two swords went spinning in the air, and Alexis' weapon, +sweeping through one of the enemy, also cut down another. But again the +Cossack had left an opening for the officer's pistol, and the latter was +not slow to take advantage of it. + +Slowly he raised his weapon and took careful aim. He had determined not +to miss this time. His finger tightened on the trigger, and---- + +Aid came from an unexpected source. + +Marquis, who, up to this instant, had remained alert over Chester, had +not taken a hand in the battle. His eyes fastened at this moment on the +German officer, his canine intelligence told him as clearly as words +that his giant friend stood at death's door. With one fierce growl, he +sprang from Chester's side, and leaped upon the German officer from +behind, even as the latter pressed the trigger. The officer's aim had +been deflected, and the bullet passed over Alexis' head. + +The German turned upon this new assailant with an imprecation. His hand +went to his holster in an attempt to draw his second revolver. But +Marquis was prepared for this move. His teeth met in the officer's hand +and the latter yelled with pain. + +Marquis released his hold and sprang straight at his enemy's throat. The +latter was thrown from his feet by the force of this attack, and in +falling his head came in contact with the sharp barrel of his revolver, +knocking him unconscious. + +Marquis, now having entered the battle, had no thought of leaving Alexis +to fight it out alone. Once in the fight, he was there to stay. He +sprang forward and leaped upon a German soldier who at that moment would +have plunged his sword into Alexis' defenseless back. The man gave a +choking cry as the teeth of the dog found lodgment in the back of his +neck and he was borne to the ground. + +And still the giant Cossack, with herculean strength and unbelievable +prowess, was fighting his assailants. A sword had pierced him through +the left hand, another had scratched his cheek and a third had struck +him in the right shoulder. But still, unmindful of these wounds, he +fought on with the same determination and courage as before. + +Marquis, having dragged the man off his back, Alexis plunged into the +midst of his enemies anew. Two more were pierced through and through by +the quick and mighty thrusts of the powerful arm. Another dropped with a +bleeding head, as Alexis caught him squarely with a quick back-handed +blow just in time to avoid the point of the other's weapon. + +Now there were but eight Germans left, and these leaped quickly +backward, thinking to put enough distance between them to allow them to +draw the revolvers. But Alexis gave them no time for this. Springing +after them as they turned to flee, he cut two more down with mighty +strokes. Then the others scattered. The Cossack sprang after one and +disposed of him before he could draw his pistol, but the others now had +had time to get their guns. + +A bullet struck Alexis in the right shoulder, but he did not even +stagger. He rushed quickly upon one of his enemies, who stood with a +revolver pointed squarely at him, his finger on the trigger. There was a +sharp report, followed instantly by another and the German fell to the +ground with a bullet in his head. Alexis sprang out of the cloud of +smoke unharmed. + +This time the Cossack had been saved from death by the hand of Chester. +The lad having recovered sufficiently to take in the scene about him, +had staggered to his feet, thinking to go to the aid of his companion. +But he was so weak he could not stand. Then, seeing the revolver dropped +by the German officer, he had crawled toward it. At last he reached it, +and he had just time to aim and fire before the man who had drawn a bead +on Alexis could pull the trigger. + +There remained but four Germans on their feet, and these, having +witnessed the mighty prowess of the giant Cossack, turned to flee. But +Alexis was after them in a flash. His blood was up, and though bleeding +in a dozen different places, he had no mind to quit the battle until the +last of his enemies had been laid low. + +But the fleeing Germans, unfortunately for them, had turned their faces +in the wrong direction. Hal and Stephan, who had been struck spellbound +by the terrible fighting of their friend and brother, saw the four men +coming toward them, weapons in hand, with Alexis in hot pursuit. Quickly +they aimed and fired. At this distance a miss was impossible. Two +Germans staggered in their stride, reeled, and dropped over backward. + +The others halted, appalled by the forgotten presence of this new enemy. +The stop was unfortunate for them. Alexis bore down on them like an +avenger, and close on his heels came Marquis. The Germans hesitated, +then started to run. It was too late. + +Alexis' mighty sword cut down one before he had taken a dozen steps. The +other, bewildered, and not knowing which way to turn, threw down his +weapons and raised his hands in token of surrender. + +Alexis, however, did not perceive this move. The light of battle still +flashed in his eyes, and he could see nothing but glittering swords and +shining revolver muzzles. His upraised sword would have split the head +of the German, had not Hal, stepping forward quickly, caught the blow +upon his own weapon. + +"Alexis!" he cried sharply. + +The giant paused and looked around as one in a dream. Then he slowly +raised his sword, gazed at the lad blankly for a few seconds, spun twice +around and fell forward on his face. He had swooned. + +Stephan leaped forward, and from his canteen poured water over the face +of his brother. Knowing that the giant was in good hands, Hal dashed +forward to where Chester still lay, having fallen back after firing the +one shot. The prisoner, now unguarded, took to his heels and was soon +out of range. + +"Are you badly hurt, Chester?" asked Hal, anxiously, bending over his +friend. + +"I feel pretty weak," was Chester's reply. "But I don't believe I am +seriously hurt. A bullet must have grazed my temple, and the force of +the shock put me out. But say! Isn't Alexis a terrible fighter?" + +"I should say he is," answered Hal. "I don't believe anyone ever saw +such fighting before. Certainly not since the days of Hereward." + +Hal assisted Chester to his feet and, supporting him by an encircling +arm, led the way to where even now Alexis, having received first aid +treatment at the hands of his brother, was sitting up and gazing about +somewhat vacantly. + +Chester spoke to the big Cossack. + +"I owe my life to you," he said simply. "I shall never forget it." + +"That's all right," replied Alexis. "I remember now. It was quite a +fight, wasn't it? But I remember once when I was attacked by----" + +His voice died away, and he sank to the ground again. + +His friends bent over him anxiously, and Hal placed a hand over his +heart. It was beating regularly while his deep and regular breathing +proclaimed his condition. + +"He is sleeping," said Hal quietly. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +ON THE VISTULA. + + +"How far are we from the Vistula now, Alexis?" asked Chester, as the +little party rode rapidly forward. + +"Not more than seven or eight versts, I am sure," was the reply. + +"Is it likely the Germans have advanced that far in this section?" + +"There is no telling; we shall have to be careful." + +All day long the four friends had been hurrying toward the Russian +lines. Alexis, after his terrible struggle with overwhelming odds, when +he had dashed forward to save Chester, had slept for hours without +moving-all night, practically. When he awoke, shortly before dawn, he +announced that he was in condition to move on. + +Chester's wound also had benefited by the rest and now bothered him +little. While Alexis and Chester slept, Hal and Stephan had succeeded in +capturing four horses; and so, long before sunrise, the little party +continued their flight, Marquis, as usual, trailing along behind. + +For another hour now the four rode on, and then a welcome sight +confronted them. Hal was the first to perceive water ahead, and called +the attention of the others to it. + +"The Vistula," said Alexis briefly. + +There was not the sign of either friend or foe. For some unaccountable +reason neither bank of the stream was guarded. Hal supplied an +explanation. + +"The Germans have probably been pushed back further to the South," he +suggested, "thereby doing away with the necessity of a patrol here." + +They drew nearer the river. At this point the stream was very deep, and +there was no bridge; but as the four drew up on the bank, Chester made +out a cloud of smoke coming up the stream. + +"A steamer!" he exclaimed. + +The lad was right. The smoke drew nearer, and at last the friends were +able to discern the outline of a small river vessel steaming toward +them. They jumped from their horses, and advanced to the very edge of +the water, where they awaited the approaching boat. + +"She may be a German," said Hal. + +"It is hardly likely," said Alexis. + +"But I understood the Germans had fitted out several river steamers," +said Hal. + +"True," replied Alexis; "I had forgotten. We shall have to be careful." + +But now the vessel was close enough for those on shore to make out her +flag. The emblem flying aloft was that of the Czar. Hal drew off his +coat and waved it about his head. + +"If they will stop and pick us up," he explained, "it may save us a +tedious ride." + +A sharp blast of the whistle signified that Hal's signal had been seen. +The steamer came to a stop in midstream, a launch put off toward the +shore, and soon grounded at the spot where the four friends stood. + +Quickly they leaped into the little craft and were soon aboard the +steamer, where they were greeted by the commander of the vessel. Hal +explained their situation as briefly as possible. + +"Well," said the commander, "I can't promise to put you ashore +immediately, for I am bound further up the river in pursuit of a German +steamer that has been bombarding several upstream towns. When I have +disposed of the enemy, however, I shall be glad to land you down the +stream, for I shall return immediately I have sunk the foe." + +With this the fugitives had to be content. They were assigned quarters +on the steamer, and after washing the dirt and grime from their hands +and faces, they returned on deck, where they made themselves comfortable +as the steamer continued on her way. They passed several little towns +without stopping. + +Suddenly those on deck were brought to their feet by the booming of a +single heavy gun. All strained their ears to listen. The first report +was followed by the sound of others. The commander of the vessel sprang +to action. + +"Full speed ahead!" he cried. + +The steamer leaped forward faster than before. The crew prepared for +action. The guns were made ready and the crews stood to their posts. The +commander, from his position, motioned the four friends toward him. + +"We have run the enemy down," he informed them. "Can I count upon your +services if they are needed?" + +"You may," replied Hal and Chester briefly. + +Alexis and Stephan nodded their heads in assent. + +"Good!" said the commander. "You will stay here near me, then. I shall +not hesitate to call upon you." + +Rounding a slight bend in the river, the Russian steamer came in full +sight of the enemy. So silently had she approached, that the Germans, +engaged in hurling shells upon a little village, did not perceive their +presence until a shell from the Russian plowed up the water under the +prow of their boat. + +As soon as the Germans became aware of the presence of another enemy +they turned to meet it. Their forward guns were quickly trained upon the +Russian steamer and burst into action. The first salvo was harmless, for +the range had not been gauged accurately. + +The Russians were more fortunate with their second fire. A shell burst +squarely upon the deck of the German with a loud explosion. There was a +shower of steel and wood, followed by a cry of triumph from the crew of +the Russian vessel. A second shell carried away the enemy's single +smokestack and a third burst in the muzzle of one of the foe's forward +guns, blowing it to atoms. + +At full speed the Russian advanced, and when within two hundred yards +swung her broadside to the enemy and poured in a rain of shells. The +Germans fought back gamely, but with the first success of the Russians +they seemed to have lost their heads and fired wildly. Their aim was +poor, and the Russians suffered little. + +Having delivered his broadside, the Russian brought his forward guns to +bear and with these he raked the deck of the enemy--fore and aft--with +shot and shell. + +All this time the vessels had been drawing closer together. Now the +German commander, apparently realizing that he was fighting a losing +battle, steamed full speed for the Russian ship. By a hasty maneuver the +Russian commander avoided being run down, but a second later the vessels +crashed broadside to broadside. + +The German vessel stood somewhat higher in the water than did the +Russian craft, and before any aboard the latter realized what was +happening, the foe swarmed down the side onto the Russian vessel. So +sudden and unexpected was their onslaught, that for the moment the +Russians on deck gave way before them; and had it not been for the +presence of mind of Hal and Chester, it is likely the German rush would +have been successful. + +The two lads sprang forward into the very faces of the enemy, their +automatics spitting fire as they leaped. Alexis and Stephan came close +behind them. The very fury of their attack caused the Germans to halt +momentarily, and this gave the Russian sailors time to rally and spring +to their aid. + +Their automatics having been emptied, the lads leaped into the thick of +their foe, striking out with their naked fists. Hal twisted a sword from +the hand of a German officer, and laid about him lustily. Chester, +stooping, came to his feet with a sword in his hand, and joined his +friend in the press. Alexis also possessed himself of a weapon and +rushed forward. + +By this time the Russian sailors had met the foe and the conflict became +general. Slowly the Germans gave way, retreating to the side of the +ship. Then, suddenly, they turned and leaped for their own vessel, which +still lay close, under the guiding hand of the German commander. The +Russians plunged after them, following them to the deck of the German +ship. + +Brought to bay, the Germans turned in a last desperate stand. Releasing +the helm, the German commander himself sprang into the midst of the +struggle. His sword flashed aloft, and two Russian sailors hit the deck, +pierced through and through. He was a big man, this German commander, +and a powerful one. As he pressed fiercely forward, for a moment the +first line of Russians gave way; but at that moment he ran against a +solid obstruction in the form of Alexis. + +They fell to, hand to hand, and on all sides of them the others gave +way. Thrusting and parrying, the two skipped forward and back, each +losing ground and then recovering it. Alexis, by a quick sidestep, +avoided a fierce thrust, and stepped forward to put an end to the +encounter. In his haste he slipped, and slid to the deck. + +With a fierce, guttural cry of satisfaction, the German stepped forward, +raised his sword and would have plunged it into his opponent's breast; +but Alexis was too quick for him. With his bare hand he seized the naked +blade aimed at him and clung to it. In vain did the German try to draw +his sword through the Cossack's hand. Alexis' mighty grip held it +easily. + +Now, putting forth greater exertion, by the aid of the weapon to which +he clung, Alexis dragged himself to his feet. In vain did the German +commander wrench at the sword. He could not free it. He at length gave +up the idea, dropped the sword and leaped back. + +As Alexis, now firm upon his feet once more, took a step forward, the +German commander turned and ran toward a rack of rifles. Alexis did not +take time to reverse the weapon he still held by the point. Raising it +high above his head, he carefully gauged the distance, and let fly. The +sword went hurtling through the air, turning once in its flight. Alexis' +aim was true, and the point of the weapon pierced the German commander +squarely between the shoulder blades. He threw up his hands and fell +forward on his face. + +Alexis turned and surveyed the battle. + +The Germans had been pressed back by the Russians, led by Hal and +Chester, until now they were fighting desperately on the stern of the +vessel. Alexis dashed forward to take part in this fray; but the +Germans, having witnessed the death of their commander, had lost heart. +Perceiving the giant form rushing down upon them, they threw down their +arms as one man. Some turned quickly and leaped overboard into the river +and struck out for the shore, while others stood quietly waiting to be +bound by their captors. The battle was over. + +Immediately the commander of the Russian steamer ordered his men and the +prisoners back aboard his own ship. Then he turned to Hal and Chester. + +"As you have taken such a prominent part in this victory," he said, "I +will allow you to finish the work by blowing up the enemy. You will +attach a fuse to the magazine and then hurry back here, that we may +reach safety before the explosion." + +The two lads saluted, and made their way to the magazine of the German +vessel. Here they quickly attached a fuse, and lighted it. Then they +hurried aboard the Russian steamer, which immediately got under way. One +hundred yards, two hundred yards, three hundred, they steamed from the +doomed vessel; then there came the sound of a muffled explosion, the +German craft burst into a sheet of flame, broke into two pieces, and +settled slowly beneath the waters of the Vistula. + +"A good job done," said the Russian commander briefly. + +He turned once more to the two lads. "I want to say," he added, "that it +has never been my fortune to meet two braver lads. You are English, I +take it?" + +"Americans," replied Hal briefly. + +"So? Still, I might have known it. I have known several Americans, and +they were always cool and brave. Where do you wish to go now?" + +"Well," said Hal, "we would like to get back to Lodz. I suppose our +regiment is still stationed there." + +"I will see that you get there with all possible dispatch," the +commander promised. "I will land you where it will be most convenient +for you." + +The lads thanked him, and walked across the deck, where they rejoined +Alexis and Stephan. + +"You would make a pretty good sailor, Alexis," Chester told him. + +The Cossack drew himself up and strutted proudly for several moments. + +"Of course I would," he said. "It is nothing new to me." + +"Nothing new!" exclaimed Hal in some surprise. + +"No," replied Alexis. + +"You mean you have been a sailor?" demanded Chester. + +"Certainly. Of course the commander of this vessel did a fair piece of +work a few moments ago; but I could tell him a few things. Why, when I +commanded a ship in the battle of----" + +"Enough! Enough!" cried Hal, throwing up his hands in protest. + +"Do you doubt my word?" demanded Alexis fiercely. + +"Not at all," Hal hastened to assure him. "But, Alexis; have you learned +yet what 'drawing the long bow' means?" + +"No," replied the giant, "are you going to tell me at last?" + +"I had about decided to," said Hal slowly; "but after this, never!" + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +INTO THE CARPATHIANS. + + +"So," said the Grand Duke Nicholas, "you find that there are adventures +to be found in the eastern as well as the western theater of war, eh?" + +"Yes, Your Excellency," replied Hal. + +"And tell me," continued the Grand Duke, "what do you think of the +Cossacks as fighters?" + +"From what we have seen," replied Chester, "I should say that there are +none better." + +"Good!" was the emphatic rejoinder. "There are none better!" and he +regarded the lads silently for some moments. + +Hal, Chester, Alexis, Stephan and Marquis, after the battle on the +Vistula, had returned to Lodz without difficulty. The commander of the +Russian river steamer had made it as easy for them as possible. In Lodz +they learned that their regiment had been ordered to the front, and had +been on their way to join it, when the Grand Duke, inspecting his +troops, had come upon them. He immediately had the two lads taken to his +quarters, for he was greatly interested in them. Alexis, Stephan and +Marquis waited without. + +At last the Grand Duke spoke. "I have a mission for you, if you are +willing to undertake it," he said. + +"Yes, Your Excellency," replied Chester. + +"Very good! As you may know, my primary aim, from the beginning of the +war, was an invasion of Hungary--the capture first of Budapest and next +of Vienna. This necessitates the capture of Cracow, in Galicia, and the +forcing of a passage through the Carpathian mountains--a tremendous feat +at this time of year. The investment of Cracow is certain. Even now my +troops are within a few miles of that stronghold, and I had word this +morning that part of it is in flames. Do you follow me?" + +"Perfectly, Your Excellency," replied both lads. + +"Very well! Now, in some unaccountable manner, my plans have always been +anticipated by the Austrians. How or by whom I do not know; but I +believe it has been by some of Brunnoi's bandits, who have a stronghold +in the Carpathians, but mingle freely with our soldiers. Do you know who +Brunnoi is?" + +"No, sir," from both the lads. + +"Well, Brunnoi is a veritable bandit chief--a man of great cunning and +influence, besides being a born gentleman. A Hungarian, and therefore a +Slav, he should naturally support the Russian cause. He has a strong +following and his men would make first-rate soldiers. We are seeking his +support, and so are the Austrians. However, if it is through his spies +that my plans are being given to the Austrians I would like to know it. +Do I make myself clear?" + +"You mean," said Hal, "that you would have us find out just where he +stands?" + +"Exactly! He has sent me word that he will espouse our cause, but I fear +he may be double-dealing. Naturally, therefore, you will keep your +identities secret. That is all." + +The lads saluted, and turned to depart, but before they could leave the +tent a man in civilian garb entered the tent. The Grand Duke greeted him +warmly and then called to the lads. + +"I wish to introduce you to Count de Reslau," he said. "He, if any man, +can give you information that may be of aid to you." + +The two lads acknowledged the introduction, and as he recognized the +newcomer, Hal started back. The latter smiled. + +"I see you remember me," he said pleasantly. "I must apologize for my +previous rudeness. I did not then know you were friends of the Grand +Duke." + +Both lads bowed. Count de Reslau was the man who had laughed at Alexis +in a store in Lodz some time before--the man whom the lads believed to +be responsible for their being set upon in the street. The count +explained the matter to the Grand Duke. + +"Well," said the latter, "I am sure these lads bear no malice." To the +boys he added: "The count is one of my best friends. Being a Hungarian +he has not taken up arms against Hungary, although he is in sympathy +with us. I am sure he can aid you." + +He then gave the count an idea of the mission the lads were about to +undertake, and the count promised to help them in every way possible. + +"Your Excellency," said Hal, as they prepared to take leave of the Grand +Duke, "have we your permission to take Alexis with us?" + +"And who is Alexis?" demanded the Grand Duke. + +Chester explained. + +"Take him by all means," was the Grand Duke's reply; "and return to me +at the earliest possible moment." + +The lads saluted and left the tent. Alexis joined them on the outside +and the boys told him of the work ahead of them. + +"But how about me?" Stephan demanded. "Am I not to go too?" + +"No; I am sorry," replied Hal. "The Grand Duke said nothing about you. +Besides, three are better than four." + +Stephan was greatly disappointed, and showed it plainly. However, he was +not a man to complain. He wished them good luck, shook hands all around +and set off to rejoin his own regiment. + +Suddenly Hal bethought himself of Marquis. + +"We can't take him," he said. "He would be in the way. What shall we do +with him?" + +Alexis bethought himself of a friend in the city who, he was sure, would +be glad to look out for the dog while they were away. Accordingly +Marquis was taken to this home, where the woman of the house readily +agreed to take care of him; but when they came to leave, Marquis wanted +to go, too. + +"No," said Hal, and he talked to the dog quietly for several minutes, +explaining to him the necessity of his remaining behind. + +There could be no doubt that the dog understood, for a sorrowful look +came over his face. His tail wagged in understanding of his orders, but +there was a hurt look in his eyes. However, he did not protest, and when +his three friends finally walked away, he stood looking after them +regretfully, although making no attempt to follow. + +"The first thing," said Hal, "is to procure three good horses." + +"Yes," agreed Alexis, "and another to carry food." + +"No," answered Hal. "We cannot be bothered with that. We shall have to +live off the country." + +Alexis made no objection, though it was plain to both lads that the +Cossack would have rather made due preparations to care for the inner +man. Three strong, wiry Cossack horses having been placed at their +command, the three leaped into the saddles and set off through the +streets of Lodz at a slow trot. + +Darkness was falling when they came to the outskirts of the city, and +turned their heads toward the southwest. As far as Cracow the roads were +held by Russian troops in force, and the three travelers experienced no +difficulties. They did not go close to the beleaguered city, but bore +off a bit to the north, just skirting the great Russian army before the +Galician stronghold. + +Three days and nights they traveled without incident. Their food they +purchased at little towns through which they passed, or at farmhouses; +and they slept wherever they happened to be when night overtook them. +But now that they were drawing close to the Carpathians, Hal decided +that the order of things must be reversed. + +"In the future we shall travel at night," he said. "We'll do our +sleeping in the daytime." + +This plan was approved by both Chester and Alexis, so that the morning +of the fourth day found them approaching the long line of mountains. + +The Carpathian mountains encircle Hungary on three sides, separating it +from Germany on the northwest, from Galicia on the northeast and from +Turkey on the southeast. At the southern extremity of the range, a +branch proceeds in a southerly direction across the Danube to the center +of European Turkey, connecting the Carpathian mountains with the great +eastern branch of the Alps. + +It can readily be seen, therefore, that the Carpathians are much like +the Alps--made up of rugged peaks between which are narrow passes. These +passes furnish the only means of getting across the mountains. + +In their search for Brunnoi, the boys and Alexis were now approaching +that part of the mountains which separates Hungary from Galicia, and +through which there are but three passes; so that their traveling had to +be done slowly and with great care. + +"Now, if you will permit me, I shall take the lead," said Alexis. "I +have been in these parts before. Besides I have been told of certain +landmarks in these foothills which indicate where Brunnoi holds +forth--not definitely enough to lead us straight to him; but I have a +general idea of the direction." + +No objection being offered, Alexis swung into the lead and the horses +plunged up a narrow pass into the midst of the wild hills, probably the +wildest and most desolate spot in all Europe. Great trees and massive +rocks overhung the little pass, making progress extremely difficult. At +the top of the first steep incline, the riders allowed their horses to +stop and rest. Then they fared on again. + +It was nearing daylight when they came upon a small hut, shrouded by +trees, through which a dim light twinkled. + +"We'll wait here until daylight," said Hal, "and when the occupants of +the hut come out we will accost them." + +They waited. Daylight came, and with its coming, a man came from the +hut. Hal approached him, and addressed him in German. The man looked at +him shrewdly, and then answered in the same tongue. + +"Yes," he said, "we can spare you something to eat; also your friends. +May I ask what you are doing in the mountains?" + +"We are trying to make our way to Budapest," replied Hal. "We were +captured by the Russians, and escaped. We are not familiar with the +ground, however, and have met with difficulties." + +"Well," said the man of the hut, "I can set you right. Come." + +Over the meal they talked of the war. Finally Chester said: + +"Is there any truth in the report that Brunnoi will go over to the +Russians?" + +"None!" cried the man, striking the table a hard blow with his fist. "I +know, because I am one of his men." + +"What!" exclaimed Hal, in well simulated surprise, though he had +surmised as much. + +"Yes," said the man quietly. "Brigands, they have called us. But they +will find that when the Russians attempt to cross the Carpathians, as +they surely will, we bandits will give as good an account of ourselves +as will the trained troops. We love our country just as well as do those +who live in Budapest. But tell me, you are not Hungarians nor Austrians, +nor even Germans?" + +"No," said Hal, thankful that they had been wise enough to discard their +uniforms before setting out upon their mission. "We are Americans." + +"Ah!" said the man. "I have heard much of them. And you have been +fighting with the German army?" + +"Yes," said Chester truthfully. + +"But this man," said their host, turning to Alexis. "Is he an American +also?" + +"Yes," replied Hal, and signified for Alexis not to speak, for fear that +his accent might betray him. + +Their host was evidently satisfied. The meal finished, the man walked +with them to the door, and pointed out the direction they were to take. +Then he pointed also to the southwest. + +"In that direction," he said, "lies the home of Brunnoi. No, there is no +truth that he will espouse the Russian cause. Even now he is able to do +much harm to their cause. He is with Austria to the last drop of blood +in him." + +The three took their departure, going in the direction the man had +pointed out. But once out of sight, Hal changed the course, and they +bore off to the southwest for several hours, looking for a place to +secrete themselves for the day. + +"We shall have to be very careful," said Chester. + +The truth of this statement was proved a moment later. From behind came +the sharp crack of a rifle. Chester's hat leaped from his head. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +THE BANDIT CHIEF. + + +Hal, Chester and Alexis threw themselves to the ground with a single +movement. A second bullet sped harmlessly overhead. + +"We didn't come here to fight," Hal whispered to his friends, "so here +goes." + +He drew a handkerchief from his pocket, and waved it aloft. This was +answered by a command in German, from some distance away. + +"Stand up; put your hands above your heads and advance." + +The three friends did as commanded. Three swarthy-faced men, with +leveled revolvers, advanced to meet them. Quickly they searched their +prisoners, relieved them of their weapons, and bound their hands +securely. + +"Forward march," commanded one, poking the muzzle of his weapon into the +small of Chester's back. + +There was no help for it. The three friends obeyed. + +"Where are you taking us?" demanded Hal of one of their captors. + +"To Brunnoi!" came the brief response. + +"Great Scott!" said Hal to Chester, in English. "We certainly couldn't +have got there quicker any other way. You don't suppose he has learned +of our mission." + +"I don't see how that is possible," replied Chester. + +"Nor I; I suppose the thing to do is to try and convince him we are +German soldiers, or else come straight out and tell him who we really +are and why we are here." + +"The latter way might be best," said Chester, thoughtfully. "For Brunnoi +after all may not be such a staunch Austrian supporter as our late host +would have us believe." + +"True," said Hal. "I hadn't thought of that." + +After an hour's ride they came to a little clearing in the forest that +covered this point of the mountain. Here they were ordered to dismount, +and for half a mile proceeded on foot. As they advanced still further +the lads made out the mouth of a huge cavern. Into this dark hole their +captors pushed them. Down the mouth of the cavern they walked, and then +suddenly came to a sharp turn. Ten more paces and they bumped into a +solid wall. One of their captors stepped forward and passed his hand +over the surface of the smooth rock, and it gave way before him, turning +on well-oiled hinges. + +"Great Scott!" muttered Chester. "I have read of these things, but I +never expected to see one." + +The rock fell into place behind them, and the boys saw that they stood +in a well-lighted compartment, in which stood a table and chairs. Their +guards led them further along, to where they perceived a closed door. On +this one of their captors knocked sharply. + +"Come in," came a deep voice from beyond the door. + +One of the guards opened the heavy wooden door, and stood back, +signifying for the prisoners to enter. + +The three friends did so. The room was brilliantly lighted. At a large +mahogany desk sat a man in a military uniform, though of what country or +what his rank the boys could not tell, for they had never seen a similar +uniform and the man wore no shoulder straps. The chairs in the room were +beautifully upholstered, and pictures were hung about the walls. All +this the lads saw at a single glance. + +The man at the desk rose and approached them. He bowed slightly, and, +after ordering their hands released, indicated three nearby chairs. + +"Be seated, if you please," he said politely, at the same time motioning +the guards to withdraw. + +Hal, Chester and Alexis did as requested. There was now no question of +the man's identity in the mind of any. He wore a long white beard and +had a pleasant, kindly face. + +Hal rose to his feet. + +"Are you Brunnoi?" he asked. + +Brunnoi bowed. + +"At your service," he replied. "Now, what can I do for Lieutenants Payne +and Crawford, and their Cossack friend?" + +The lads started to their feet upon hearing their own names thus upon +the lips of a man they did not believe could possibly know them. + +"Come, come, gentlemen," said Brunnoi, smiling at their surprise. "You +see, many things are known to me. For instance, now, I could even tell +you the object of your expedition to these mountains. Is it necessary?" + +Hal threw wide his arms with a gesture of dismay. + +"I guess it is not necessary," he said quietly. + +"Good!" cried Brunnoi, for the first time evincing real interest in the +lad. "You are a man after my own heart. You have nothing to gain by +subterfuge." + +"Well," said Hal slowly. "You know who we are and the object of our +mission. What is your answer? Are you Austrian or Russian? Are you a +Slav or not?" + +Brunnoi jumped to his feet. + +"Yes," he replied, "I am a Slav; but I am not one of your down-trodden +Russian Slavs. I am a Hungarian, and a Hungarian--a true +Hungarian--to-day is an Austrian!" + +"Then," said Hal calmly, "our mission is accomplished. We know where you +stand. May I ask you a question?" + +"Certainly." + +"Is it true that you have been able to furnish the Austrian general +staff with the Grand Duke Nicholas' plans?" + +Brunnoi was silent for some moments, but at length he replied: + +"I don't mind answering that question, for you will never repeat my +answer to the Grand Duke. Yes, I have furnished the Austrian general +staff with important information." + +"Well," said Chester, breaking into the conversation, "what are you +going to do with us?" + +"Why," said Brunnoi, "for the present you shall be kept here as my +guests--prisoners, if you prefer. After that--well, it all depends. +Should the Russians come, it may be necessary to dispose of you. +Therefore, you should be wise and pray for Austrian success." + +"Surely you do not mean that you would murder us?" asked Hal. + +"I call it by no such name," replied Brunnoi calmly. "Putting away an +enemy is not murder." + +"Very well," said Chester calmly. "I suppose there is no use talking +about it." + +"Not the slightest. Come! Follow me, and I shall show you where you will +make your home." + +The bandit chief arose from his chair and led the way into another +compartment. Hal, Chester and Alexis followed him. This room was also +fitted up comfortably, though not as pretentiously as the bandit's +office. There were several beds in the room. + +"You may make yourselves comfortable here," said Brunnoi. "The door will +be always locked, but that need not interfere with your comfort." + +He bowed and left the room, and the three prisoners heard the key turn +in the lock behind him. + +"It looks to me as though we are in a bad way this time, all right," +said Chester, when they were left alone. + +"A bad way is no name for it," replied Hal; "but tell me, Chester, did +you notice anything familiar about Brunnoi?" + +Chester clapped his hands together. + +"By Jove!" he exclaimed. "Now that you mention it, it seems to me I have +seen him some place before. But I can't place him." + +"Nor I; but I am positive this is not the first time we have met. It is +his voice that puzzles me." + +In vain the boys racked their brains. Alexis was called into +consultation. He also had been impressed by Brunnoi's likeness to some +one he had seen before; but he was unable to throw any light upon the +resemblance. + +"Well," said Chester at length, "I can't place him and that's all there +is about it. Nevertheless, I am absolutely certain I have met him some +place before to-day." + +The door to their prison was now opened and food was placed upon the +table in the center of the room. All three were nearly famished, and +they fell to with a will. + +"Fattening us up for the slaughter," said Chester with a laugh. +"However, I guess they won't kill us to-day." + +Slowly the hours passed. There was not a single window or opening in the +room, and the prisoners could not tell whether it was day or night +outside. But now Hal, glancing at his watch, uttered an exclamation of +surprise. + +"Almost midnight," he said. "Guess we might as well turn in." + +Hal and Chester tumbled into the beds, but Alexis continued to sit in +his chair, brooding. + +"Come on, Alexis, get to bed," Hal called. "What on earth's the matter, +anyhow?" + +Alexis did not reply, and Hal repeated his question. + +"I was just thinking," said the giant, "what a fool I was to let these +fellows take my gun away from me without even a struggle. With a good +gun apiece, we might be able to get away from here." + +"Cheer up," said Hal. "We are not going to be killed. While there is +life there is hope. We'll get out of this ticklish situation somehow. +Just be patient." + +"Patient!" echoed Alexis; "how can a man be patient cooped up in a place +like this?" + +"Well, it can't be helped now," said Chester. "Come on to bed." + +But Alexis was in no mood to turn in. For perhaps another half-hour he +sat brooding; then he arose and made a tour of the room. He put his hand +on the doorknob and tried it. It was securely locked, and the Cossack +had no doubt that it was also bolted on the far side. He rattled the +knob angrily, but there was no answer from the outside. + +Alexis continued his tour of inspection. He eyed the table +speculatively. It was made of oak and while not of great bulk was very +heavy--as much as two ordinary men could lift. Alexis picked it up and +tested its weight. Then he growled something to himself. + +He also tested the chairs and even the bed on which he was to sleep, all +the time growling to himself like a dog. Then, his tour of the room +completed, he sat down in his chair again. Hal and Chester had been +watching him from beneath lowered lids. + +Hal raised himself up. + +"Find anything?" he asked. + +Alexis vouchsafed no reply. + +"Great Scott!" cried Chester, sitting up. "Are you going to mope around +all night? Come to bed and get a little rest, that you may be fit to +meet any emergency should it arise." + +"A good idea," growled Alexis to himself, and extinguishing the light, +threw himself upon his bed. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +GETTING AWAY. + + +All were up long before a guard appeared with breakfast. This they ate +leisurely and then sat down to talk their predicament over calmly. + +"There must be some way of getting out of here," said Chester. + +"Yes," agreed Hal; "and if we are fond of life, I believe we had better +get away soon. But what can we do?" + +"You leave this to me," growled Alexis. "I have it all figured out and +when the time comes, we will go." + +"What!" exclaimed Chester. "You have found a way out?" + +"Yes," replied the giant briefly. + +"Then----" began Chester, but he was interrupted by the sound of a key +turning in the lock of the door. + +A moment later the smiling face of Brunnoi appeared in the doorway. He +entered the room and closed the door behind him. + +"I have come to tell you," he said, "that I am going away for possibly a +week. You shall be kept here until I return. By that time I will have +decided just what to do with you. I am taking most of my men with me, +but I have no fear of your getting out of this room." + +"We are grateful for your thoughtfulness in letting us know you are +going away," said Hal sarcastically. "I am sure we shall miss you." + +"I am glad of that," replied Brunnoi. "Your meals will be brought to you +at regular intervals. Till I return then." + +He waved his hand airily and stepped quickly through the door, closing +and locking it behind him. Immediately he had left the room Alexis +jumped to his feet. Hal and Chester watched him in surprise. + +The giant Cossack walked over to the bed in which he had slept and +quickly stripped it of its coverings. Then, when nothing but the bare +frame remained he stepped inside of it. Doubling up his huge fist, he +drove it into the footboard with tremendous force. There was a +splintering crash and it fell in twain. Wrapping his hardly-used +knuckles in a cloth he picked up from the floor, he repeated the +operation on the headboard--and the bed lay in four pieces on the floor. + +Seizing the first portion by one of the heavy legs, he tore at it with +his naked fingers, like a dog at a bone; and soon, exerting his +tremendous strength, he had stripped it clean. The second of the smaller +legs he treated in the same manner, and likewise one of the larger legs +at the head. Then, with these three clubs in his hands, he approached +the two boys. + +"Here is a weapon apiece for you," he said, extending one of the smaller +legs to the lads. + +Hal and Chester each took the proffered weapons. They were ungainly and +heavy, but the lads realized that they were indeed formidable weapons. +Alexis stood looking at them with the big leg resting lightly on his +right shoulder. It was a massive piece of wood, this third leg, a +terrible weapon in the hands of a giant like Alexis. + +"Now," said Chester, "we have these weapons, but how are we going to get +out of here?" + +"Don't let that worry you," replied the giant. "As soon as we are +certain the bandit king is well on his way, we'll get out." + +An hour they waited--two hours, before Alexis rose slowly to his feet, +indicating that the time for action had come. Slowly he approached the +door and pressed his great weight against it. It did not budge. + +"Surely you are not expecting to get out that way?" said Hal. + +Alexis did not deign to reply. Instead he walked over to the table in +the center of the room, and with a single movement swept the dishes on +to the floor. Then, lifting the heavy table, he raised it above his +head, and advanced upon the door. + +Once, twice, thrice the stout oak table crashed against the solid door. +It gave slightly. The giant struck the door a fourth tremendous blow, +and the table burst into a hundred pieces. + +"There," said Chester, "I didn't think it would give." + +"I was afraid so, too," said Hal. + +Alexis said nothing. Instead he approached the door, and pressed against +it--testing it. Then he turned, and without exertion, wheeled a second +massive bed into position before the door. This he braced with the third +bed, so that by straining his hardest, he could not budge them. + +"What are you going to do now?" demanded Hal. + +"You'll see," replied the giant briefly. + +He stepped between the door and the first bed, close to it. Here, +bracing himself against the bed, he laid his great hands against the +door and pushed. There was a slight cracking noise. Under this terrible +force, the door was straining. And still the giant kept up the pressure. + +The muscles in the back of his neck stood out like bands of iron. The +sinews in his bare arms quivered and seemed about to leap from beneath +his skin; and still Alexis struggled with the unyielding door. There +came again the sound of cracking; and the giant released the pressure. +Even from where they stood, the lads could see the door sway inward into +place, thus showing the pressure that had been put against it. + +The two lads were lost in admiration of the great strength of Alexis. + +"It doesn't seem possible," said Hal, half to himself. + +"It isn't possible," declared Chester. + +But Alexis did not heed these remarks. Hurling the beds away with fierce +kicks, he cleared a space in front of the door. Then he drew back. + +"Look!" exclaimed Chester in an awed voice. + +Even as he spoke, Alexis drew himself together for a spring. Ten quick +steps he took, and then hurled his giant frame against the heavy door. +There was a thud as he smashed against it, followed by a great crash of +splintering wood, and Alexis, door and all went down in a tangled heap. + +Quickly the giant extricated himself and darted back into the room, +where he picked up his massive club. Whirling it wildly about his head +he shouted to the lads: + +"Come on!" + +Without a moment's delay, surprised as they were, the lads lifted their +own weapons, and dashed after the Cossack. Straight out the door of the +bandit chief's private room the three ran into the corridor beyond. +Sprawling figures sitting idly about gave evidence that the chief had +not taken all of his men with him. At the abrupt entrance of Alexis +these jumped to their feet, drawing knives and swords. + +Alexis was upon them in a trice, Hal and Chester close behind him. +Rapidly the huge club of the giant rose and fell, once, twice, +thrice--even to five times, and with each crushing blow a man went down +with a crushed skull. The others drew back. + +The two lads now ranged themselves on either side of Alexis, and +together they charged the foe. There was no escape for the bandits, now +backed into a corner; but they fought back with a desperation born of +despair. Three minutes later there was not a man standing on his feet. + +Alexis rested the end of his club upon the ground, and leaning on it, +wiped the perspiration from his brow. Then, after a brief rest, he led +the way to the entrance to the cavern, barred by the great rock. + +"Here," said Chester, "I am afraid, is where we stop. We do not know how +to open it." + +Alexis pushed the lads aside and examined the rock. Then, without a +word, he dropped his club and put his shoulder to the boulder that +barred the exit. The first attempt made no impression. Taking a deep +breath, the giant tried again. Putting every ounce of his herculean +strength into this final effort, he exerted himself to the utmost. + +Slowly the huge rock began to move. Slowly it began to swing outward. +Then, more rapidly, until, as the catch was released, it swung away back +on its hinges. Alexis, unable to recover his balance, fell forward on +his face. He was up in a moment, however, and the three darted from the +cavern. + +For half a mile they sprinted, seeking to put as great a distance as +possible between themselves and the cavern before pausing for breath. +Then, suddenly, Alexis toppled over on the ground. + +Hal dropped to his knees and gently raised the giant's head. + +"Quick, Chester! Some water!" he cried. + +Chester darted away, and soon returned with water in his cap. This Hal +sprinkled over the giant's face. His efforts were rewarded at length. +The color slowly returned, and Alexis heaved a deep sigh. Consciousness +was returning. + +"Poor fellow," said Hal softly. "He has worn himself out." + +"Yes," said Chester, "and had we not brought him along, we would still +be prisoners in the cavern, with our death only a question of days or +hours." + +"True," said Hal. "And such strength," he added, "I never saw before." + +"Nor do I ever expect to see again," said Chester. + +Now Alexis stirred and groaned. Then he sat up. + +"What has happened?" he demanded. + +"Through your prowess and bravery," Hal made answer, "we have escaped." + +Alexis jumped to his feet and patted himself on the chest. + +"It is true," he said, "I am a brave man; and I am a strong man, am I +not?" + +"There can be no question about either," replied Hal. + +"Still," continued the giant, "all things considered, that was not such +a remarkable feat. Now I remember once----" + +Chester interrupted. + +"Come," he said, taking Alexis by the arm, "we must get away from here. +The story can wait." + +Alexis subsided without further words, and the three continued on their +way. + +"The thing to do now," said Hal, "is to get back to Lodz as quickly as +we can. With luck, we should make it in four days." + +"Yes," agreed Chester, "we have learned what we set out to learn. There +is no use delaying." + +The attention of all three was at that moment attracted by the sound of +galloping horses, nearby. The hoof beats were coming toward them. Alexis +sprang to action. + +"We must have horses," he said in a hoarse whisper. "Otherwise we will +be weeks getting back. We will take these." + +"How?" demanded both lads in a single voice. + +"Follow me," commanded the giant. + +Breaking into a quick run he hurried along the road to where it curved +sharply. Here they could not be seen by the approaching riders until +they actually met. + +Alexis took his stand in the center of the road, motioning for the boys +to take positions, one on each side of the road. Then all stood waiting. + +The hoof beats drew nearer, and then the horses came trotting round the +bend. + +"Only three! Good!" Hal muttered to himself unconsciously. + +The riders were right upon Alexis before they realized that their way +was blocked. They quickly drew rein and attempted to check their +animals; but it was too late. Alexis had two of the horses by the +bridles, and pushing them back on their haunches by main strength, +succeeded in unseating the riders. + +Hal and Chester pounced upon the two unhorsed men, and had their weapons +before they could make a move to defend themselves. Alexis, still +holding to the two horses, called upon the lads to cover the third +rider, who seemed about to make a dash for liberty. + +Hal was quick to obey. + +"One move," he said quietly, as he pointed his newly-acquired revolver +squarely at the third man, "and you are a dead man." + +The latter raised his hands above his head. While Hal kept him covered, +Chester advanced and relieved him of his weapons. Then he ordered him to +dismount. + +Alexis now approached with the other two horses, one of which he turned +over to Chester. Hal took the third horse. + +"We are sorry to be forced to do this," said Hal to the men whose horses +they had appropriated, "but necessity knows no law. We need these +animals worse than you do; therefore, we take them." + +"We are thankful," said one of the men, "that you have spared our +lives." + +Quickly the three friends leaped into their saddles, and spurred their +horses onward. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +ATTACKED. + + +For several hours the friends rode along the narrow mountain pass +without incident. They stopped once at a little mountain stream to +quench their thirst and to allow their horses to drink. Then they rode +on again. + +Rounding a sharp turn in the road, they came squarely upon half a dozen +riders, all attired in Austrian uniforms. Hal realized their peril and +acted upon the instant. + +"Quick!" he shouted to his two friends. "Ride them down!" + +The Austrians were no less surprised than the three friends at this +unexpected encounter; but they also acted quickly. They reined in their +horses and drew their swords and revolvers. + +But before they had time to bring their revolvers to bear, the two lads +and the huge Cossack were upon them, Hal slightly in the lead. + +Hal fired one shot as he swept down upon the foe, but there was no time +for more. The nine horsemen met with a shock, but the Austrians, being +motionless, had the worst of it. The momentum of the horses ridden by +the two lads and the Cossack carried them through. + +"Ride!" shouted Hal, as they burst through the enemy. + +It was no time for fighting if it could be avoided, and the lads +realized it. All three put spurs to their horses and dashed down the +road, rounding a bend just as the Austrians, having recovered, fired. +None was hit. + +"This is one time where discretion is the better part of valor," panted +Hal to his friends, who were riding close beside him. "We'll run for +it." + +The Austrians quickly turned their horses and dashed on in pursuit. + +Hal, glancing back, saw that the enemy was not gaining, and reported +this to his friends. Thus encouraged, they urged their mounts even +faster, and before long had drawn out of sight of the pursuers. But at +the very moment they seemed to be safe, Chester's horse stumbled and +fell, hurling the lad headlong. + +Quickly the others drew up and rushed to his assistance. The lad was not +badly hurt, and was soon able to stand. Then, from the rear, came the +sounds of their pursuers. + +"We can't stand here," cried Hal. "Quick, Chester! Into this clump of +trees." + +Chester did as told and Alexis followed him. Hal, however, seizing the +two horses that were standing led them in between the trees. Then he +sprang to the side of the fallen animal. Grasping him by the head, he +succeeded in getting him to his feet and under cover just before the +Austrians came into sight. A minute later the Austrians swept by. + +Hal breathed a sigh of relief. + +"Pretty close," he said quietly. "Now let's get out of here by the other +side." + +Leading the two horses they started on. Five minutes later there loomed +up through the trees what appeared to be a barn. They advanced toward +it. Not a soul was about, but they proceeded cautiously for they did not +wish to walk into a trap. + +Hal tried the door to the barn. It was locked. Alexis soon remedied +this, however. One quick twitch of his wrist and the lock came off. Hal +went in, and started back with a cry of surprise. + +"What's the matter?" demanded Chester. + +"Matter?" repeated Hal. "Look!" + +He stepped back and Chester peered over his shoulder. + +"Automobiles!" he said in astonishment + +It was true. Inside the shed were four large touring cars. + +"What on earth can they be doing here, I wonder," said Chester. + +"I haven't the faintest idea," replied Hal, "but if we can find any +petrol I should say it is a lucky find for us." + +He made a rapid inspection of the shed, and stopped at the far end with +a low whistle. + +"What is it now?" demanded Chester. + +"Petrol," replied Hal. "Gallons and gallons of it. Now what do you +suppose it is here for?" + +"That doesn't concern us," said Chester dryly. "We'll fill up the tank +of one of these cars and get away." + +Quickly this was done, and the car was run out the door. Chester climbed +into the rear seat and motioned for Alexis to follow him. Alexis +hesitated. + +"I've never been in one of those things," he said slowly. "Now, a horse +is all right. I know all about a horse. But I don't know anything about +these things." + +"Never mind that," said Chester. "Get in here quick. Those Austrians are +likely to be back any minute and we must hurry." + +Alexis climbed in, plainly not without trepidation, and sank back in one +of the comfortable seats. Hal already had taken his place at the wheel, +and slowly the large machine moved forward. + +"I wonder," said Hal to Chester, "whether we can go down these passes +safely." + +"Where a machine has gone once, another may go," said Chester calmly. +"Besides, if you'll notice, there is a well-defined track ahead of you, +and unless I am much mistaken, it goes not toward the road but away from +it." + +"By Jove!" replied Hal. "You are right. Now I wonder how that happens." + +Gradually the car gathered speed, until it was traveling along at a good +gait. Hal did not wish to go too fast, for he was not familiar with the +roads, and besides, the steep grade also precluded this. + +Night fell. Hal stopped the car long enough to light the searchlights. + +"They may betray our presence," he said, "but if I don't light them we +are likely to go into a ditch." + +The car crept along slowly during the night hours, and morning found +them still in the mountains. With the coming of dawn, however, Hal put +on more speed, and by noon they were once more on the plains of Galicia. +Then Hal "let her out." + +Suddenly the machine flashed by a body of troops. Hal swerved to one +side of the road just in time to avoid running into them. Chester caught +a glimpse of their uniforms. + +"Russians!" he called to Hal. + +"Are you sure?" the latter called back. + +"Sure," replied Chester. + +Hal reduced the speed of the car. + +"In that event I'll slow down," he said. + +The car went along now at a more moderate pace; but once again on a road +clear of troops, the speed was increased. They made several stops along +the route, and it was late the following afternoon when they recognized +the familiar minarets of Lodz. Half an hour later the lads were admitted +to the presence of the Grand Duke, Alexis remaining outside in the +automobile. + +Hal made his report to the Grand Duke clearly and concisely. + +"I feared as much," said the Russian commander-in-chief, when the lad +had finished. "You have done well, however. You will rejoin your +regiment as soon as convenient." + +At this moment Count de Reslau appeared in the Grand Duke's tent. He did +not at first notice the presence of the two lads, and bowed to the +Russian commander. + +"Your Excellency----" he began. + +At that moment his eyes rested on Hal and Chester and a look of surprise +and consternation passed over his face. + +"You here?" he cried. + +Hal and Chester bowed. + +"Yes, sir," said the latter quietly. + +The Grand Duke turned to the count with a smile. + +"And they have successfully performed their mission," he said. "But it +is even as I have feared. Brunnoi will support Austria. And what is +worse, my plans are being learned by at least one of his agents and sent +to the Austrian general staff." + +"Impossible!" exclaimed the count, who had now regained his composure. +He turned to the two lads. "Certainly," he said, "when I saw you last I +did not expect that you would ever return here. It was a hazardous +mission the Duke sent you on. Are you sure your information is +authentic?" + +"Perfectly," replied Hal calmly. "Brunnoi himself was our informer." + +"In that case," said the count with a shrug of his shoulders, "you must +be right." + +He turned, and with a few brief words to the Grand Duke, left the tent. +The lads talked for some moments with the Russian commander-in-chief, +and then left the tent, informing him that they would join their +regiment the following day. Outside, they climbed again into the +automobile and Hal drove the car to the house where they had left +Marquis. + +The dog was overjoyed at seeing his friends again. His tail wagged +fiercely and he barked with gladness, insisting upon kissing all three, +in spite of their protests. + +"Down, Marquis!" cried Hal with a laugh. "Do you want to eat us up. Now +what do you say, sir, will you be glad to rejoin your regiment +to-morrow?" + +"Yes! Yes!" barked Marquis. + +"Good!" said Chester. "But we will leave you here while we get something +to eat. Then we will come back and get you." + +The three left the house, and made their way to the nearest restaurant, +where they ordered a sumptuous meal. It had been long days since they +had tasted food in plenty, and they ate hungrily. It was almost dark +when they left the restaurant and started after Marquis. + +As they passed down a side street, five men armed with long knives +sprang out upon them. The three friends were caught off their guard by +the suddenness of the attack, and in spite of the fact that they drew +their swords, for they were again in uniform, their assailants pressed +them sorely. A sword thrust pierced Hal in the arm, and his weapon fell +to the ground. He drew his revolver with his left hand, however, and +fired point-blank at his adversary. His aim was true, and there was one +enemy less. + +At the same moment Chester ran his opponent through, and Alexis brought +another to the ground. The other two turned and fled. + +"I wonder what that was for?" said Chester, brushing himself off. + +"I can't imagine why we should have been attacked," declared Hal. + +He broke off; for at that moment he espied a figure standing in a nearby +doorway; eyeing them evilly. Hal caught Chester by the arm, and pointed +to the figure. + +"There is the answer," he said quietly. + +Chester gazed in the direction indicated. Then, with a sudden cry, both +boys dashed toward the doorway. + +For the man they saw, with a sneer curving his lips, wore a long, +flowing, white beard and a military uniform. + +He was Brunnoi, chief of the Hungarian bandits! + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + +A STRANGE DISCOVERY. + + +Seeing that he was discovered, Brunnoi darted from the doorway and tried +to escape. But he was not quick enough. The lads were upon him in an +instant, and beneath their weight the bandit chief was hurled to the +ground. He struggled fiercely, clawing and scratching like a cat; but +Hal and Chester were too much for him. + +Brunnoi finally ceased his struggles and lay quietly in the lads' hands. +Hal took him by the collar and jerked him to his feet; then, each lad +taking an arm, they led their prisoner straight to the Grand Duke's +quarters. They were admitted instantly, and pushing their captive before +them, they approached the Russian commander-in-chief. + +"Whom have you there?" demanded the Grand Duke, looking at the prisoner. + +"Brunnoi, sir," replied Hal calmly. + +"What!" cried the Grand Duke, springing to his feet. "Is this the bandit +chief?" + +"It is, sir," replied Chester. + +"I am Brunnoi," said the bandit calmly. "You have me. What will you do +with me?" + +"You shall be shot in the morning!" cried the Grand Duke angrily. + +Brunnoi smiled. + +"I fear you are mistaken," he said quietly. + +The Grand Duke grew very angry. + +"You shall be shot at eight o'clock," he said very quietly. "You have +already caused me much trouble. I can't afford to let you escape." + +He summoned a guard of an officer and ten men, and turned the bandit +chief over to them, with orders that he be shot in the morning at eight +o'clock. + +As Brunnoi was led by the three lads, he smiled at them. + +"I will see you later," he said calmly. + +The Grand Duke thanked the lads for their important capture, and then, +with Alexis, they made their way to the house where Marquis was waiting +for them. They were given connecting rooms and were soon in bed. + +Tired out they slept heavily. Therefore, while they had expected to +arise before eight o'clock, nine found them still sleeping. They were +awakened at last, however, by the sounds of a commotion in the adjoining +room. + +The two lads sat up in bed and listened intently. Heavy footsteps +tramped toward their door and it was thrown open with a quick jerk. + +Hal and Chester uttered exclamations of surprise. Confronting them, in +the doorway, was the smiling face of Brunnoi, who was to have been put +to death an hour before. In his hand he held two revolvers, covering the +lads. + +"You see I have kept my word," he said. "I was not shot." + +"How did you escape?" demanded Hal, asking the only question he could +think of at that moment. + +"Never mind that," replied the bandit. "Get your clothes on quickly, and +come with me." + +Under the muzzles of the two revolvers, the lads dressed hurriedly. The +presence of Alexis in the adjoining room--the giant lying completely +covered up by bed clothes--passed unnoticed. But Alexis, beneath his +covering, heard what was going on and understood. + +"Go out ahead of me," ordered Brunnoi. + +He dropped his two revolvers into side pockets, but kept his fingers on +the trigger of each. + +"One false move and I'll drop you," he said quietly. "Now, march!" + +Slowly the lads left the room, and Brunnoi followed them; but hardly had +they disappeared through the door, when Alexis bounded out of bed and +silently followed. + +At the outside door, Brunnoi stepped back to allow his captives to pass +out first. For an instant he was off his guard. It was Alexis' +opportunity and he leaped suddenly forward. + +Brunnoi heard the sound of the giant's footsteps. He turned quickly, and +drew his revolvers, but the Cossack's leap was too quick. With a single +movement he sent both of the weapons from the bandit's hands, and +reached out to seize him. + +Brunnoi was as slippery as an eel. He eluded Alexis' grasp and darted +through the door. Now without weapons, he took to his heels. + +Hal perceived the flying apparition, and reached out a hand to detain +him. He clutched the flowing white beard of the bandit chief--and the +beard came away in his hand. Brunnoi fled down the steps and made good +his escape, Hal being too surprised to move. + +Chester and Alexis were equally as astonished. + +"Well, what do you think of that?" demanded Chester, in great surprise. +"A false beard! But I wonder how he escaped from the firing squad." + +"It's too deep for me," Hal admitted. "But we had better report this to +the Grand Duke." + +Together they made their way to the quarters of the commander-in-chief. +The latter listened to their story with interest. + +"I have just learned of Brunnoi's escape from the firing squad," he said +when they had finished their account of their experience with the bandit +chief. "Count de Reslau, being a Hungarian himself, was greatly +interested in this Brunnoi. He asked me for a pass to see him, I granted +this request. The guards saw the count leave the tent after a few +moments' conversation. But when they went in to lead Brunnoi forth to +execution, he was gone, and another man was there in his stead. He had +exchanged places with Brunnoi." + +"Have you perfect confidence in Count de Reslau, Your Excellency?" asked +Hal. + +"Absolute confidence," replied the Grand Duke. "Why?" + +"No particular reason," replied the lad. + +At this moment Count de Reslau himself entered the tent. + +"I hear Brunnoi has escaped," was his first remark to the Grand Duke. + +"Unfortunately, that is true," replied the Russian commander. + +"Strange," said the count. "When I talked to him a couple of hours ago +he seemed resigned to his fate." + +"But," said the Grand Duke, "he paid these lads a visit soon after his +escape. Following a struggle, he again got away." + +The count glanced at the lads incredulously. + +"Has it ever occurred to Your Excellency," he said quietly, "that these +two lads may know more about Brunnoi than they care to admit?" + +"What!" exclaimed the Grand Duke. + +Hal took a quick step forward. + +"What do you mean by that?" he asked calmly. + +"You know what I mean," replied the count with a sneer. + +He turned again to the Grand Duke. "Has it never occurred to you, Your +Excellency, that these boys may be associated with the bandit--that they +may have been leading you on." + +"But, but," stammered the Grand Duke, "their mission to the Carpathians. +Their struggle to get away and their flight. What of those?" + +"Mere fiction, I should say," said the count with a shrug of his +shoulders. + +Hal stepped directly in front of the count. + +"That is a lie," he said quietly. + +The count raised a hand as if to strike him, then thought better of it +and turned away without a word. Plainly the count's words had made an +impression upon the Grand Duke. He looked at the two lads closely. + +"What have you to say to that charge?" he demanded. + +"Nothing," replied Chester, "except that it is too absurd to be given +credence." + +"Absurd," sneered the count. "You brought the bandit here in the first +place, realizing that it would give you standing with the Grand Duke, +and knowing all the time that the way had been paved for his escape. If +you had no hand in his escape, how did you know he had gotten away +before coming here?" + +"He came after us," said Hal, "and would have led us away had it not +been for Alexis." + +"Absurd," said the count again and turned to the Grand Duke. "You see," +he said, "how foolish that is. You should have concocted a better +story," he added to Hal. + +Now the Count de Reslau was one of the Grand Duke's closest friends, +and, as the Duke had said, he had implicit confidence in him. It was +only natural, therefore, that he should be impressed with his reasoning. + +He advanced upon the two lads, and pointed an accusing finger at each. + +"The count is right!" he exclaimed in a loud voice. "I can see it all! +You are traitors! I would have sworn by your honor in spite of the short +time I have known you. You have rendered me, I still believe, valuable +service; but you have caused me to play into the hands of the enemy in +other matters." + +"Your Excellency," said Chester, stepping forward. "Count de Reslau +possibly means well, but he is badly mistaken. His reasoning is at +fault. We are innocent of this charge." + +"You deny it?" fairly shouted the Duke. + +"Of course they deny it," said the count. "It is hardly probable they +would admit being traitors and spies." + +"I understand perfectly," declared Nicholas as he stepped to the door of +his tent. + +"Orderly," he called, "summon the corporal and ten men." + +He stepped back into the tent and turned upon the two lads angrily. + +"You shall see how we treat traitors in Russia," he said. + +An officer and ten men now strode into the tent. The Grand Duke waved +his hands toward the two lads. + +"Take them out and shoot them immediately." + +The officer advanced toward the lads. + +"Your Excellency!" exclaimed Hal, stepping forward. + +"Enough!" cried the Grand Duke. "I will be trifled with no longer. +Officer, do your duty!" + +The guards surrounded the boys, and they were marched from the tent. + +Count de Reslau smiled to himself as they were led away, and turned to +the Grand Duke. + +"Let us go out and watch the proceedings," he said. + +"Very well," agreed the Grand Duke, and they hurried after the firing +squad and the prisoners. + +The lads stood facing their would-be executioners when the Grand Duke +and Count de Reslau appeared. At that moment, Hal felt something in his +pocket that gave him a sudden thrill. + +"I am going to take one last chance," he said to Chester. To the Duke he +called: "Your Excellency, may I make a last request?" + +The Grand Duke nodded an assent. + +"I would say once more, Your Excellency," said Hal, "that we are +innocent. But," he paused, "I can produce Brunnoi himself!" + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +THE MYSTERY CLEARED. + + +Chester stared in astonishment at his friend. Had he gone mad and taken +this means of staying their execution? + +The Grand Duke staggered back a step, and Count de Reslau smiled +incredulously. + +"Have I your permission to do so, Your Excellency?" asked Hal. + +The Grand Duke waved his hand. + +"You shall have three minutes to produce him," he said angrily. + +"Good!" said Hal. "It will require even less." + +His right hand was in his pocket. Suddenly it flashed forth, and with it +something white. Straight toward Count de Reslau the lad sprang, and +before the latter could leap out of the way Hal grasped him firmly by +the back of the neck with his left hand, and with his right clapped a +long, flowing white beard to his face. Then with a twist, he whirled him +so that he faced the Grand Duke. + +"Behold Brunnoi, chief of the bandits!" he cried. + +The Grand Duke staggered back again, and put one hand to his eyes. + +"Impossible!" he exclaimed. + +But he was forced to believe what his eyes saw. Count de Reslau and +Brunnoi, the bandit chief, were one and the same man. There could be no +doubt of that. + +In vain did the bandit struggle to free himself from Hal's firm grasp. +The lad clung to him tightly in spite of all his efforts. Then, +realizing that the Grand Duke must be convinced, he dropped the beard to +the ground and stepped back while half a dozen rifles covered the count. + +The Grand Duke, with a wave of his arm, instructed the officer in +command of the firing squad to release the two lads. Then he ordered him +to conduct the bandit chief to his quarters, and motioned the lads to +follow. Inside the tent the Grand Duke turned upon his false friend. + +"De Reslau," he said, addressing the prisoner, "we have been friends, +and for that reason I am offering you a chance to make a satisfactory +explanation--if you can." + +"I have nothing to say," replied the prisoner. + +"Will you tell me how you have conducted your operations?" + +The bandit did not reply and Hal stepped forward. + +"Your Excellency," he said, "I believe I can rehearse it from beginning +to end. The count probably will correct me if I am wrong." + +The Grand Duke ordered him to proceed. + +"Well," said Hal, "the count knew of our mission. We went horseback, but +the count, being prepared for these rapid journeys, proceeded by +automobile." + +The bandit chief glanced at the lad in surprise. + +"How did you know that?" he demanded. + +"We stumbled upon your automobile garage in the mountains," said Hal +quietly. "Of course, when we returned, the count was waiting for us. Why +he left us behind alive when he came back here, I don't know, but I now +remember how greatly surprised the count was to see us back safely. +Immediately he planned to get us out of the way. Hence the attack the +other night, in which we were fortunate enough to capture him." + +"But the escape?" demanded the Grand Duke. "How did he escape?" + +"Very simple," replied Hal. "The man to whom you gave the pass to see +the prisoner was of course not Count de Reslau, but a man made up to +resemble him. Am I right, count?" + +"Yes," replied the bandit. "I have kept him near me for that very +purpose. He had his orders that in the event I was ever arrested, he +would make up to resemble me." + +"Exactly," continued Hal. "Once alone with the prisoner the rest was +easy. He removed his disguise, and Brunnoi removed his. Brunnoi came out +as Count de Reslau, and the other man stayed. Naturally, the first thing +the count thought of when he was free was to dispose of Chester and +myself. Hence his call this morning. As he escaped from Alexis I +succeeded in pulling off his beard. That's all there is to it." + +"And now," demanded the bandit chief, "what are you going to do with +me?" + +"There is but one thing I can do with you," replied the Grand Duke. "The +fate of Count de Reslau shall be the same as that already pronounced for +Brunnoi, the bandit. You shall be shot within the hour. Personal +friendship shall not keep me from doing my duty. Officer, see that my +command is carried out." + +The guard closed in about Count de Reslau and he was led away. Then the +Grand Duke Nicholas, commander-in-chief of the Russian armies, sank into +a chair, and buried his face in his arms on the table. Quietly the lads +left the tent. + +"By Jove!" exclaimed Chester, as they walked along, "you spotted de +Reslau just in time. Another moment and it would have been too late. +Tell me, how did you happen to hit it?" + +"Ever since I pulled Brunnoi's beard off this morning," replied Hal, +"another face has kept flashing into my mind. I could not make it out +clearly until just as we stood before the firing squad. Then I saw it as +plain as day." + +"It's lucky for us that you did," said Chester with enthusiasm. "But +here comes Alexis. He'll be glad to know that Brunnoi has been disposed +of." + +And he was. + +"But you make much over a small matter," he said. + +"Small matter!" exclaimed Chester. "I should say that proving Brunnoi +and Count de Reslau were one and the same person was quite a big +matter." + +"If you had asked me," returned Alexis calmly, "I could have told you +that several days ago." + +"You could?" cried both lads in a single voice. + +"Of course. I knew it right along. You see, my eyes are unusually keen. +I remember once how this keen sight proved of great advantage. We were +on a raid. The officer in command, using his glasses, could not quite +make out objects moving some miles away. He called upon me. My eyes, +being far more powerful than the glass, showed me plainly what was going +on, and we were thus kept from falling into a trap. Then I remember +another case----" + +"One is enough," said Hal dryly. "If you knew Brunnoi and Count de +Reslau were the same person, why didn't you say so?" + +"Why," said Alexis in no wise disconcerted, "I didn't see that it made +any difference." + +"Then your sight is not so good after all," said Chester. "But what are +we going to do now, Hal?" + +"Well," said Hal, "I guess we might as well go get Marquis and return to +our regiment. Our work here is done." + +The dog was indeed glad to accompany his three friends forth once more, +and so, procuring three fiery chargers, the trio set out to rejoin their +regiment at the front--some miles to the west of the city of Lodz. + +Most of the officers of the regiment to which the three were attached +had been killed in the previous battle, and so when they finally reached +it, Alexis found that instead of being a lieutenant he had become a +captain. + +"You see," he told the boys confidentially, "a brave man always comes +into his own. You will see how these fellows fight with me at their +head. They will be a whole lot different, I can tell you." + +The Russians had intrenched themselves along the entire front, as had +the Germans only a short distance away. During the days in which the +lads had been in the midst of the Carpathians, there had been only +skirmishing between the opposing forces. Long range artillery duels +raged incessantly; but there had been little work for the cavalry and +infantry. + +There had of course been several charges and counter charges, but the +advantage rested with neither side. The Russian troops, in spite of the +cold weather, made themselves comfortable in the trenches, wrapped to +the chin in their heavy sheepskin garments. Used to severe winter +weather, the Russian troops did not fare as badly as did the Germans, +who suffered severely. + +The lads' regiment was stationed near the center of the long line of +battle. Preparations for a movement of some sort were being made on all +sides. Troops were being hurried here and there, and officers dashed +hither and yon. Occasionally the men burst into song; while from the +German trenches came the chanting of the "Watch on the Rhine." The men +of both armies were making the best of the situation, and seemed +reasonably happy. + +From his pocket one of the Russian officers now produced a pack of +cards. Alexis, invited to take a hand, consented, but Hal and Chester +refused. + +"What's the matter?" demanded the officer. "Are you too good to play +cards?" + +"Not a bit," smiled Hal. "We simply don't care to play, that's all. We +do play occasionally, for pastime, but we don't gamble." + +"Don't gamble!" exclaimed the officer. "How can you play cards if you +don't gamble. Come on now, we need two more players." + +"No," said Hal, decidedly. "We shall have to ask you to excuse us." + +Even Alexis glanced at the lads in astonishment. Plainly this was beyond +his comprehension, as gambling among the Cossacks is an ordinary +pastime. But the other officer was not satisfied. He arose and came +directly up to Hal. + +"You must play with us," he said. + +"I am sorry," replied Hal, "but we do not care to play." + +"Afraid, eh?" said the Russian. + +"No," replied Hal, "we are not afraid. We simply don't care to play." + +"You are cowards," said the Russian, and jostled Hal with his shoulder. + +Hal stood his ground and refused to be pushed aside. The Russian reached +out a thumb and finger and pulled Hal's nose. Then he staggered back, +for Hal had sent his fist crashing against his chest. + +Quickly the Russian officer drew his sword and sprang upon the lad, who +also drew his weapon and stood on guard. But now Alexis leaped to his +feet, and his own sword struck up the weapons of the others. + +"Enough of this," he said sternly. "Put up your swords." + +"I have no desire to fight," replied Hal calmly. + +"I know you haven't," sneered the Russian. "You are afraid. But I demand +satisfaction for that blow." + +"Well," said Alexis, "if you must fight, let it be with fists." + +"Any way suits me," said the Russian. + +"If he insists on a fight, I am willing to give it to him," said Hal, +and quickly threw off his coat. + +The Russian also discarded his heavy coat, and the two squared off. It +was perfectly plain to Hal that the Russian, although considerably +larger than himself, was no boxer, and he had little doubt of the +outcome, for the lad was proficient in the use of his fists. + +The Russian came forward with a rush. Hal sidestepped neatly, and the +huge fist passed by harmlessly. Hal sent a quick sharp blow to the +Russian's cheek, staggering him a bit. The latter turned and again +rushed at the lad. + +Quite a crowd had now collected around the combatants and watched the +contest eagerly. As the Russian rushed at him this time, Hal struck up +the blow with his left forearm, and stepping in close planted his right +over his opponent's heart. The Russian staggered back, and at the same +time Hal sent a series of left and right jabs to his opponent's face. + +But the Russian, recovering, bored in again, striking out wildly at the +lad. The latter gave a clever exhibition of footwork, and not a single +blow landed. At the same time he continued to tap the Russian lightly on +either side of the face. + +Suddenly the Russian lowered his hands and stepped back. + +"I quit," he said, smiling foolishly. "There is no use trying to hit a +man when he runs away all the time. Now with swords or pistols----" + +"There will be no swords or pistols used while I am here to prevent it," +exclaimed Alexis. + +At that very instant the clear call of a bugle sounded in the Russian +trenches. Quickly all personal animosities were forgotten, and the men +sprang to their posts. + +It was the signal for an advance. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +THE ATTACK. + + +The reconnoitering cavalry of the advancing forces gave way to groups of +infantry, scattered in loose formation, feeling their way toward the +German trenches. The points and small flanking parties of the advance +guards, in front of each column of advance, crept along with straining +eyes in search of the enemy's line of observation. + +A few hundred yards to the rearward the supports advanced alertly, ready +to scatter into a thin line of skirmishers at the first shot and rush +ahead to where the points halted. In the rear of them the infantry +columns, with one rumble of artillery close to the front, moved and +halted, as the thin line to the front paused for a moment to scan ahead, +then pushed on again. + +Out of the stillness of the dew-dripping woods in front, the shot came. +There was no reply for a moment, then two or three closer reports rang +loud in reply; then there came another pause, and as the hurrying +supports deployed and flung themselves behind the nearest cover, in +momentary scanning before pushing ahead to investigate decisively, there +came a short, ragged volley from out ahead. + +The reports were flat and dull, as a rule, but a few cracked viciously +as though fired close at hand. These last followed the vacuum of +low-flying bullets and had a spat and twang of their own. + +For weeks these two armies had been facing each other; for a week +assault had wrestled with counter assault and the armies had striven +time after time to snatch an advantage from a massing of columns, or a +seeming check. + +For miles to right and left, every road, every footpath, every few yards +of broken ground was trodden by the feet of short columns, prepared to +charge into lines at the needed moment, when the fire of the enemy +became a menace. The trenches were abandoned in the rear, yet should the +columns in the rear, which by the heads formed a long, long line of +supports, be hurled back in repulse after an unsuccessful attack, the +trenches would be greeted as comfortable old friends and reoccupied. + +The leading columns deployed into thin lines, with short intervals +between the men, as the shrapnel broke. From out the blur of the +mingling of landscape and sky there came, simultaneously, a whir, a +crash, and the quick dash of shrapnel balls over the ground, and of the +brief flash which marked the shrapnel's burst there remained only a +dimly-seen lingering cloud of dirty smoke and some silent, writhing +forms on the ground. + +Then came crash after crash, as the hostile artillery opened in +strength. The silence of the morning fled into a hideous din as the +infantry broke into a dog trot and pushed ahead. + +There came a clank of trace chains and the pounding of hoofs mingling +with hoarse commands as the artillery of the Russians wheeled out of +column to position in battery, the ring of hastily-opened breechblocks, +the hollow thump of the blocks closing and the shrill notes of a silvery +whistle. Then the earth began to tremble. + +Thunderbolt after thunderbolt seemed to be discharging close in the +rear, until the very trees shook and men swayed under the compression of +air in the vicinity. Over the heads of the silent infantry, shrapnel +shrieked in reply, one after another, as the batteries opened with +salvos from flank to flank. + +Through the gaps between the belching batteries poured the infantry, the +columns dashing forward until, beneath the trajectory of the guns, it +was safe to spread out in the always thin line of the infantry advance. +The leading lines pushed on till they disappeared in the yet dim light, +and at a short distance behind them came others, until it seemed that +the end would never come, and that a hurrying city was passing. + +Ahead, the leading infantry line, absorbing the scattered men of the +first light contact line, halted at command under the mounting rifle +fire of the enemy, halted and flung itself prone, while ready hands +reached backward for intrenching tools, and the line scraped, clawed, +scooped and burrowed into the fresh earth in shallow pits, and went +about its business of returning the German fire. + +Then a second thin line ran up and merged with the first. Again shovel +and small mattock came into play and the volume of fire redoubled. Above +the cracking of the rifles the only sounds to be heard were the sharp +whistles of the officers. They shrilled in a variety of notes and +combinations, yet with an understood speech of their own, for in parts +of the line the fire slackened and two or three men left their shelter +and crept forward a few paces; or, crouching down low, dashed ahead +until the whistles spoke again. + +Intrenching tool again; then fire. That was the order of the advance. +More men crept or rushed to the new position to dig themselves into the +ground and open fire, until the entire line had advanced a few yards +under the hostile shots and a new line occupied the shelter trenches +recently abandoned. + +Here and there lay quiet forms across the path of advance. The hardy +bodies in the well-fitting uniforms seemed pitilessly small and their +clothing hung in baggy folds. Their comrades passed them by with hardly +a glance. The litter sections were far to the rear, for their time was +not yet. Duty called for assault, not for succor. + +The thunder of the contending batteries continued. Over the hastily +carved trenches the hostile shrapnel scorched their way, singing along +with a note of wild rage, searching the crevasses and folds of the +ground and scoring the earth. + +But the Russian infantry still advanced. + +Quietly filling the gaps that had grown in the firing line since the +attack commenced, the supporting lines came to the front. Each accession +of reenforcements seemed to give an added impetus to the forward +movement, for upon the arrival of each fresh contingent the line surged +ahead like breakers on a coast, and, like the incoming tide, each surge +left its mark higher upon the strand. + +With a calmness which bespoke experience, despite the light of battle +which blazed in their eyes, the new men brought and distributed fresh +bandoliers of ammunition to those who had gone before, then took their +places alongside to aid in its expenditure. The lines were not straight. +They zigzagged a trifle. There was no time for chalk-mark adjustment or +inspection, and the moment a panting body struck the ground after a +forward rush, the earth began to fly on the spot beneath the chop of the +trench-digging tools, and the hot rifles to speak. + +Men growled, muttered and shouted. Under the fighting fog that beset +each one in its own way, there came snatches of song, humming and +whistling. There were those, too, who fought silently, as though deeply +wrapped in thought, and there was bickering when a hasty comrade crowded +too close for free operation of the flying breechbolts; yet the faces +were ever turned to the front, except when they turned to the sky or the +earth, and nerveless hands fell sprawling with half-emptied rifles. + +Where officers, binoculars in hand, bent hastily to the line, men +detached themselves at intervals, and clawing at their belts, seized the +wire cutters pendant there and crawled forward. Now and then one of the +creeping ones would spring into the air and topple over, but the rest, +apparently paying no heed, continued on their way toward where the +Germans had erected wire entanglements to hold the stormers under the +blast of the enemy's fire. + +Ahead, the trenches of the Germans crackled and spat with fury, and even +under the ceaseless rain of shrapnel from above the assaulting lines the +enemy kept his place. The firing line had thickened until it was a solid +mass, one man deep, and in the rear line after line had sprung to its +feet and was closing up in support to the crucial assault. At the +trenches of the defenders, batteries, with horses falling and being cut +away in an instant, dashed to the line, unlimbered and poured in their +scattering salutations of zero shrapnel to the men in front. + +Came a clank and rattle of bayonets snapped onto the muzzles of the +assaulting line; then, with a last frenzied emptying of magazines, the +lines sprang to foot, and with hoarse voices screeching at top note, the +slender line charged forward. + +The trenches were lined with the defenders in an instant. The rifle fire +redoubled in intensity and the artillery, which had come up to stem the +tide, or assault when the supporting batteries of the attack were +compelled to hold their fire for fear of obliterating their own +attacking lines, barked at four-second intervals, opening great gaps in +the racing line at every discharge. + +In rear of the supporting lines of the assault, which were closing up at +a dead run, galloped the batteries which were to make a rallying point +in case the assault failed, or occupy the trenches, should the defenders +be driven out, and the cannoneers clutched the side rails as the pieces +swayed and rocked across the rough ground and clustered bodies which +strewed the field. + +At the crest of the parapet the lines, attack and defense met with a +ring of steel. Bayonets flashed, darted, parried and struck. Rifle butts +whirled above bare heads and the stocks crashed down through bone and +flesh. From both sides came a rain of hand grenades, bombs which +exploded upon touch. From the rear of the trenches there came running +formed troops, to assist in the repulse of the Russians, and as the +supporting lines of the attack threw themselves into the fray, the +whirling, struggling, fighting lines on the trenches' top thickened and +swayed. + +The line sagged, bulged, trembled, and broke in huge gaps. Into the +splaying breaches there rushed fresh troops from front and rear, and the +lines thickened and swayed again. Men discarded their arms to lock in +one another's embrace, fighting to the last. + +The din was deafening, yet above it there rang out the detonation and +shock of a great explosion, where a delayed mine belched upward under +the pressure of the hastening troops coming up with the attacking +reserve. Earth, stones, wire entanglements, arms and men shot upward in +a dense geyser of death, and came down in the midst of the fierce +fighting. + +Then the line broke again, and the shattered reserves of the attack, +summoning the last resources, poured into the breach with bayonet and +magazine. + +The defense gave way. + +Crumpled under the last despairing hurling of last reserves, the +entrenched line shuddered along its length, then the line lost its +cohesion, stood irresolute for a moment, then fled precipitately to the +rear. + +The whistles of the Russian officers blew again and again. Officers had +fallen until corporals and sergeants commanded platoons and companies; +yet they, too, had their whistles and knew their duties; and out of the +scramble of the attack, regardless of company, regiment or brigade, the +Russians fell into rough line, knelt, and opened fire upon the routed +enemy, while the supporting batteries dashed to the trenches, unlimbered +and belched fire and iron into the fleeing mass. + +The standards of the Russians, which had changed hands a dozen times, +during the course of the assault, were planted on the works; the troops +themselves, exhausted and spent by the might and fury of their efforts, +threw themselves into tired heaps as other brigades came up to hold the +position. + +The trenches were won! + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +THE DEATH OF A FRIEND. + + +Hal, Chester and Alexis had been in the midst of the fray, where the +fighting was the thickest. Not in the first line of attack, they had +advanced with the first reserves. And beside them, snapping, biting and +snarling, strode Marquis. + +Now the herculean prowess of the giant Cossack stood them all in good +stead. More than once Hal or Chester would have gone down, or been +trampled under foot by the troops behind, had not the quick eye of +Alexis signaled out their danger and his powerful arm come to their aid. +Guarding himself perfectly from the sword and bayonet thrusts of the +enemy, after the fighting became hand to hand, the Cossack fought like a +madman, as did others of his race, hurling himself upon his foes with +almost superhuman ferocity. + +For the first time the two lads had the experience of digging trenches +as they advanced upon the enemy, and in spite of the fact that they were +officers, they did not shirk the work. Just before reaching the parapet, +the first line of reserves--to which the friends were attached--joined +the original first line and sprang into the trenches together. + +There they fought with desperation. Not a word was exchanged between +them, although they fought side by side. There was no time for +conversation. The press was too thick, and death too near. + +But now that the Germans had turned to flee, the Russians sent up a wild +cry of triumph. Hal, Chester and Alexis rested upon their weapons, +watching the troops pour a hail of lead into the flying foe. Marquis +advanced several paces ahead of the farthest Russian troops, stood up on +his hind legs and let out a bark of joy. Bullets flew around him, and +Chester, realizing the dog's danger, whistled sharply. Marquis turned +and wagged his tail at his friend, and opened his mouth in one more +joyful bark. + +It was at that moment that a German bullet struck him. Without a sound +the noble animal crumpled up and fell to the ground. The ball had +pierced his throat. But life was not extinct. Marquis struggled to his +feet, and dragged himself toward Hal and Chester, who, having seen him +fall, dashed toward him. + +Gently Chester lifted Marquis' heavy weight up in his arms, holding him +so that the blood would not flow so rapidly from the gaping wound in his +throat. Marquis looked up into the lad's face, and uttered a low, +painful bark. His tail wagged. + +Quickly the lads hurried back to Alexis and as quickly sought out a +surgeon. Chester laid Marquis gently on the ground, and the surgeon bent +over him. After a brief examination he arose and shook his head. + +"No hope," he said quietly. "The bullet pierced his jugular vein." + +"Isn't there something you can do?" pleaded Chester, tears streaming +down his face. + +The surgeon shook his head sadly. + +"Nothing," he said, and hurried away. + +Chester picked Marquis up again, and followed by Hal and Alexis, made +his way toward the rear, where the troops were more scattered, and where +there was none to bother them. Hal drew off his coat, and Chester laid +the dog on it. + +Marquis did not whimper. He, as well as his three friends, seemed to +know that death was not far off, and he was prepared to meet the end +bravely, as a soldier-dog should. He turned slightly and licked +Chester's hand that lay upon his head. Chester patted him gently, but he +was beyond words. + +Alexis extended a huge hand and softly stroked the dog's soft body. + +"Poor fellow!" he said to himself. + +Marquis' keen ears caught these words, and he turned feebly toward the +giant Cossack, and strained slightly toward him. At the same time he +slowly raised a paw. Chester saw the movement. + +"He wants to shake hands with you, Alexis," he said brokenly. + +The giant drew nearer, and gravely took Marquis' right paw in his great +hand. Once, twice, three times he shook it gently, then laid it upon the +ground and turned away. Marquis moved restlessly, and uttered a short +bark. He was trying to see Hal, who was kneeling behind him. + +Hal arose and came around. To him also Marquis extended his paw, and Hal +grasped it and pressed it. Then, shifting his position slightly, the dog +also extended the paw to Chester. He seemed to know well that the end +was swiftly approaching, and he wished to shake hands with all his +friends before he passed away. + +Now the three gathered about the head of their dying friend. Alexis +clenched his great fists and spoke to Marquis. + +"I shall see that you are avenged," he said fiercely. "Twenty German +lives will not pay for this day's work, but I'll do the best I can. Do +you understand, Marquis?" + +Marquis' tail beat a weak tattoo upon the ground, and he barked feebly. +He understood. + +"I'll do it!" said Alexis. "You may rest assured of that." + +Now the end was fast approaching. Marquis' breath came in quick gasps. +Suddenly he staggered to his feet, stood upright a second, turned his +face toward the distant enemy, and gave utterance to one sharp bark--a +bark of defiance. Then he sank to the ground. + +His three friends dropped to their knees and bent over him. He looked up +into their faces and it seemed to all that he smiled at them. His tail +struck the ground feebly, once, twice. He shook once with a silent +convulsion. Then his body straightened out and stiffened. He lay still. + +Marquis was dead. + +His three friends rose slowly to their feet, and lifted their caps from +their heads. + +"Good old Marquis!" said Hal. "But he died as a soldier should!" + +"Yes," said Chester, "and with almost his last breath he breathed +defiance to the Germans, whom he hated." + +"There wasn't a better or braver soldier in the Russian army," said +Alexis. "We must bury him with honors." + +"We shall!" cried Chester. + +"I am somewhat handy with a knife," said Alexis. "I shall carve him a +little monument." + +"And he shall be laid to rest with full military honors," said Chester. + +And so it was done. + +All that day Alexis worked upon the little monument. When it was finally +completed, all was in readiness for the burial. The dog had made friends +in the regiment. Not a man but had become attached to him; and so it was +no small funeral cortege that escorted the body of the dog-hero to his +last resting place. + +From the quartermaster Chester had secured a large French flag. + +"He shall be buried beneath his own flag," he said, and spreading the +tricolor upon the ground, he laid the stiffened body of Marquis upon it. + +Gently he wrapped it about the dog, and then, while practically the +whole regiment stood at attention around the little grave, he placed the +body in the ground and stepped back. A volley was fired over the grave, +and the lads shoveled in the earth. + +Now Alexis approached, and, making a small hole at the head of the +grave, set up the little monument. And when he had finished, the +soldiers crowded around to read the epitaph that the giant Cossack had +inscribed in the hard wood. It was this: + +"Marquis--killed on the field of honor!" + +It was upon the following day that the welcome news came that there was +to be further action. Practically every Cossack regiment at the front in +Poland was ordered back to Lodz, their places being taken by other +Russian cavalry and infantry. + +Again in Lodz the lads learned what this new movement meant. Grand Duke +Nicholas, the investment of Galicia having been successful, had decided +upon an immediate invasion of Hungary. The Cossacks had been called to +lead the dash over the Carpathians into the heart of the enemy's +territory. + +Hal and Chester had an audience of the Grand Duke. The latter summoned +them to his quarters to offer an apology for his hasty action in +ordering them shot some days before. Also he talked a little of the +proposed invasion. + +"Sixty thousand Cossack cavalry will be the advance guard," he informed +them. "Behind these will come the infantry in great force. I plan to +have a million men in Hungary within two months. If we are successful in +forcing a passage of the mountains, and I am sure we shall be, Budapest +will be at our mercy, with Vienna as the next goal. + +"In the meantime the Poland campaign will be pressed, that the Germans +may be unable to go to the aid of the Austrians in the south. The thing +that I fear now is that Turkey may be drawn into the war on the side of +the German emperor. The Kaiser has brought great pressure to bear upon +them, and I fear that they cannot long be kept neutral." + +"What effect would that have upon the invasion of Hungary?" questioned +Chester. + +"It would unquestionably delay it for days, possibly weeks. While we are +prepared for the Turks, nevertheless it would probably necessitate the +sending of reenforcements toward the border, and naturally I should have +to draw upon the forces I am now sending into Hungary." + +"I see," replied Chester. "But the Turk, as a fighting man, doesn't +amount to much, as I understand it." + +"In the recent Balkan war they did not show much fighting prowess, it is +true," said the Grand Duke, "but officered by Germans, and under German +discipline, there may be a different story to tell." + +"But there is no danger of their affecting the ultimate outcome of the +war?" asked Hal. + +"None," was the confident reply. "What it will mean, however, is that +Turkey, as a nation, will be wiped off the map of Europe, and, possibly, +of Asia also." + +"The sooner the better," was Hal's comment. + +The Grand Duke smiled. + +"It may take time," he said, "but it will be done just so surely as +Turkey casts in her fortunes with Germany." + +After some further talk the lads left the Grand Duke's tent, and +rejoined their regiment. Everything was now practically ready for the +advance to the southward, and the troops were eagerly awaiting the word +that was to send them into the Carpathians, to strike a decisive blow at +the Austrians. + +And the word was given early the following morning. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + +RAIDING. + + +At a fierce gallop the troop of Cossacks bore down upon the little +mountain town--firing at a detachment of Austrian soldiers who ventured +forth to give them battle--without checking their speed. This band of +Cossacks, reconnoitering well ahead of the main advance guard, was +probably 1,000 strong; the Austrians opposing them much less. With the +rapidly advancing Russians were Hal, Chester and Alexis. + +The advance of the Czar's troops to the Carpathians had been without +incident. Whenever troops of the enemy had opposed them they had been +put to flight without difficulty. The cavalry, dashing rapidly ahead, +had outdistanced their cavalry and artillery support, and the entire +force of mounted men--60,000 of them--were in the midst of the wild +mountains. + +Harassed from front and, now that they had advanced well into the +mountains, also from the sides and rear, the Cossacks nevertheless +pushed on. From behind rocks and trees, isolated bands of Austrians +fired upon them, doing great execution, disappearing in the hills when +the Cossacks turned upon them. + +The reconnoitering force to which the lads were attached dashed down +upon the little mountain town, the sun gleaming on their lances and +revolver barrels. In vain did the Austrian officers urge their men to +stand firm. After one volley at the approaching horsemen, they broke and +fled, scattering in all directions. The very name, Cossack, spread +terror. + +Right into the middle of the little village dashed the troop. Now from +every window came a hail of lead, and the Cossacks, apparently trapped, +turned this way and that, not knowing which way to go. Struck by a rifle +bullet, the officer in command threw up his hands and toppled from his +horse. Quickly Alexis sprang to the head of the men, Hal and Chester +beside him. + +"Dismount!" cried Alexis. + +The cavalrymen threw themselves from their horses, and at a second +command, rushed directly upon the houses. With heavy kicks they smashed +in the doors and rushed upon the occupants within. They soon put an end +to these snipers. + +But now, around one side of the town appeared a troop of Austrian horse. + +Hal raised a cry of warning, and quickly the Cossacks turned and leaped +upon their own horses; but the Austrian cavalry had no mind to give +battle to their foes, and after pouring in a volley, turned and fled +down the narrow mountain pass. + +"After them!" cried Alexis. + +He put spurs to his horse and dashed ahead, his men following closely. + +The Austrians had not gone far when their leader called a halt and +consulted with his subordinate officer. They were, the leader knew, not +far from a point where he could expect reenforcements. + +A plan was quickly formed. The Austrians divided into two parts. The +foremost blocked the road--down which the Cossacks were rapidly +approaching--near a turn, so as to remain unseen by the approaching +enemy until almost the moment of contact. The second force stayed some +rods behind the first, forming in two lines, one along each side of the +road. Some were armed with lances and sabers, but many also carried +rifles. + +As for the Cossacks, all carried lances and revolvers. + +The Russians went forward at a gallop. Alexis was expecting to overtake +the enemy, but he was hardly prepared for the suddenness of the +encounter. + +Ere he could give an order, there came one loud, flaming, whistling +discharge from that living barrier drawn up across the road. Alexis' +horse reared, as did others of the troop. Some of the men came to a +quick stop, others were borne forward by the impetus of their former +speed, but reined in for orders. No man fell, though one groaned and two +hurled epithets at the foe. + +Alexis, now that he had his horse under control, drew his sword with his +right hand, his pistol with his left, which also held the rein, and +ordered his men to charge, to fire at the moment of contact, then to +cut, slash and club. + +The first line of Austrians, as soon as they had fired, retreated +between the two lines of supports, stopping at some further distance to +reform. The second line, being thus cleared of the first, poured a hail +of bullets into the Cossacks as the latter were caught between them. + +Many fell, but the others turned on the second barrier with furious +force, some, however, rushing upon the reforming first line. + +They were the best riders in the world, and many a one of them held his +lance aloft in one hand, his revolver raised in the other, the rein +loose on his horse's neck. + +The Austrians and Alexis' foremost men fired at the same moment. The +Austrians had not time to turn and flee, for the Cossacks, unchecked by +this second greeting of fire, came on at headlong speed. + +"At 'em, boys!" cried Hal excitedly, firing his revolver at a tall +Austrian officer, who fell sidewise from his horse. + +An Austrian officer struck with a sword at Chester's left arm, but only +knocked the pistol from his hand. The lad found himself threatened on +the right by a trooper, and slashed at him with his sword. The blow went +home, but the sword's end became entangled with the victim's breast +knot. A second trooper brought his rifle butt down heavily upon the +sword, and it snapped off. + +Chester felt a keen smart in his left leg. It came from a second sword +blow aimed by the Austrian officer, who might have followed it with a +third, but that he was now attacked elsewhere. Chester had no sooner +clapped his hand to his wounded leg than he was stunned by a blow from +the rifle butt of the trooper who had previously struck the sword. He +fell forward on his horse's neck, which he grasped madly with both arms. + +Still holding the broken sword in his right hand, Chester now lapsed +from a sense of the tumult, the plunging and shrieking horses, the whir +and clash of swords, the thuds of rifle blows, into half consciousness, +while the unguided horse turned suddenly and made off in the direction +from which he had come. + +Meanwhile the Cossacks had been pushing the Austrians back. Hal and +Alexis, fighting side by side, were so far unharmed. Right into the +midst of the enemy they plunged, and for several minutes could see +nothing but flying swords and lances. Then, at a signal, the Austrians +turned and fled. + +Hal turned to speak to Chester, but the latter was not there. In alarm, +he called Alexis' attention to the fact that Chester was missing. +Quickly Alexis ordered a halt and looked around. Bodies strewed the +road, and leaping from their horses, the two investigated. Chester was +not there. + +"Great Scott!" exclaimed Hal. "What can have happened to him?" + +Alexis questioned his men. One remembered that a great black charger had +dashed through the troop in the midst of the battle and had fled to the +rear. He remembered that a form was upon the animal's back. + +"It must have been Chester," said Hal to Alexis. "Do you go on in +pursuit of the Austrians, and I will go back and see if I can find him." + +"Good," said Alexis. "The horse probably will run back to the main +column. You should not have much trouble finding him." + +With a word of command Alexis ordered the troop ahead, and Hal started +back on the trail of his chum. + +When Chester was again aware of things he was still clasping the horse's +neck and was being borne along he knew not whither. His head ached and +his left leg pained him greatly. He was dizzy and too weak to raise +himself from his position. He could not hear any sound of fighting. He +tried to sit up and look around, but this added to his pain, so he fell +forward on the neck of his horse again. + +Suddenly the horse stopped. + +Once more Chester tried to sit up. This time he was successful, and in +spite of the pain glanced about him. The horse had halted near a little +house, set back some fifty feet from the road, and even as he looked up +a woman came from the doorway. She started in astonishment at the sight +of the horse and its wounded rider, and hastened back into the house. +She reappeared in a moment, however, accompanied by a second woman, the +latter armed with a huge revolver. + +The two now approached the lad and lifted him from the horse. They +supported him as he dragged himself into the house, and dropped weakly +into a chair. Then the women stepped back and pointed the revolver at +him. + +"You shall remain here," she said, "until I can turn you over to the +Austrians." + +Chester was somewhat surprised. By the assistance given him by the +women, he had thought that, after resting up, he would be allowed to +rejoin his friends; but the set expression on the woman's face told the +lad that she meant what she said. + +The second woman approached with water and bandages and soon bound up +his wounds. Then the lad was escorted to another room, which looked out +upon the road. The woman mounted guard over him with her revolver. + +"Some of our troops will be here before long," she told him. "Until then +I shall guard you." + +All this time Chester retained his hold on the broken sword. Suddenly, +down the road, came the sound of a galloping horse. Chester glanced +through the window and in a moment he had made out the figure of Hal. +Quickly he stepped to the window, and before his captor could prevent +him, shattered the window pane with his broken sword. + +"Hal!" he cried at the top of his voice. "Hal! Here I am, wounded and a +prisoner!" + +The woman hurled herself upon the lad and bore him back out of sight. In +his weakened condition he was no match for her. She thrust him back into +the chair. He turned his eyes to the window. Hal had passed on. + +"Great Scott!" ejaculated Chester. "He didn't hear me!" + +But Hal had heard. He recognized the sound of his friend's voice, and +realized that he was in trouble of some kind. Likewise he surmised what +the trouble was, for he knew that they were in the heart of a hostile +country. Therefore, he did not check the speed of his horse at once, but +rode some distance further before drawing rein. Then he dismounted and +tied his horse to a sapling. + +Springing in among the trees, he advanced cautiously toward the house. +Both women, secure in the belief that he had passed on, turned to taunt +Chester. The latter shut his lips grimly and refused to make a reply. + +Suddenly, from the next room, came a tremendous clattering of pots and +pans. + +Both women jumped to their feet. + +"There is someone out there!" cried one of the women excitedly. + +With her revolver pointed straight before her she moved softly toward +the door. At the same moment Chester realized Hal's ruse and cried: + +"Look out, Hal!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + +AT BAY IN THE PASS. + + +When Hal, after creeping into the house through a window, had +inadvertently bumped into several pots and pans, knocking them to the +floor with a clatter, he drew his revolver and stood stockstill. He +heard Chester's cry of warning, and, realizing that an enemy was +approaching, he drew a bead upon the doorway. + +An arm with a pistol appeared through the opening; there was a flash of +fire and a bullet sped past him. He fired quickly in return, and the +weapon of his unseen enemy dropped to the floor with a crash, followed +by a shrill scream of pain. + +"Great Scott, a woman!" cried Hal and leaped forward. + +But the woman was more frightened than hurt. Realizing that she was +uninjured, as Hal came toward her, she leaped forward and threw her arms +about him, pinioning the lad's hand that held his revolver to his side. +At the same moment she cried out to her companion: + +"Quick! Pick up the revolver and shoot him while I hold him!" + +Hal realized that he was in grave danger and struggled fiercely to free +his hands. But his adversary was a very powerful woman, and having +gained a secure hold, Hal was unable to free himself. + +The woman who had been left to guard Chester, at the command of the +other, ran to her aid. Chester, holding to the back of the chair, drew +himself to his feet and staggered after her, still clinging to his +broken sword. + +As the woman stooped to pick up the revolver dropped by the other when +Hal's bullet had struck her hand, Chester, in spite of the pain of his +wounds, leaped forward. As she arose to her feet and would have fired +point-blank at Hal, he knocked the weapon from her hand with a sharp +blow of his broken sword. + +Then coming quickly to Hal's side he took the lad's revolver from him, +and, stepping back, aimed it at the head of the woman with whom his +friend was struggling. + +"Release him instantly," he ordered, "or I shall fire!" + +The woman glanced at him over her shoulder, and smiled tauntingly. + +"You wouldn't shoot a woman," she sneered. + +"I wouldn't like to," replied Chester, "but if you have not released him +and if both of you do not line up against that wall with your hands in +the air by the time I count three, I will shoot, just as surely as I +stand here. One, two----" + +The woman glanced at him. Her eyes must have told her that the lad meant +what he said, for, releasing Hal, she stepped quickly back and raised +her hands in the air. The second woman followed her example. Chester +stepped to Hal's side, and extended the revolver to him. + +"Take this quick!" he commanded. + +Hal did so, and without another word, Chester suddenly crumpled up in a +heap on the floor. He had fainted. + +Still covering the women with his revolver, Hal knelt by his friend's +side. Then he turned to the woman. + +"Some water!" he commanded. + +Under the threatening muzzle of the revolver, the woman brought it, and +at a command from Hal, bathed Chester's face. Then, still at Hal's +command, she lifted the lad and placed him in a chair. Hal took his seat +near the window, for he knew that it was only a question of time until +some of the Russian troops passed in one way or the other. His revolver +still covered the two women, who sat without uttering a word. + +Gradually the color returned to Chester's face, and at last he opened +his eyes and looked about. He took in the situation at a glance, and +smiled faintly. + +"Well, I see we won," he said. + +"We did," replied Hal grimly. "How do you feel?" + +"Better. I shall be all right now." + +"Do you think you are equal to holding this revolver while I go out and +reconnoiter?" + +"Sure!" replied Chester. "Give it to me." + +Hal put the revolver in his friend's hand. + +"Don't hesitate to fire if one of them makes a false move," he said. +"They would kill you in a moment if they had the chance." + +"I'll use it if necessary; have no fear about that," replied Chester. + +Hal arose and left the room and the house. He gazed up and down the +road. There was no sign of troops, nor, by listening intently, could he +hear hoof beats. He made his way to where he had left his horse, and +tied it alongside the horse that had brought Chester to the house. Then +he returned to Chester and his prisoners. + +"There is no telling how long we may have to wait for our men to +return," he said to his friend. "Do you suppose that if I lifted you up +on your horse you could ride?" + +"I am sure of it," replied Chester. + +"That is the best plan," said Hal. "Come, then, we will try it." + +He went to Chester's side, and still holding the revolver in his right +hand, threw his left arm around his friend's neck. Chester put an arm +about Hal's shoulder, and thus supported, made his way from the room +without much pain. + +Hal made a stirrup of his hand, and Chester, putting his foot into it, +was soon astride his horse, though he winced somewhat with the pain the +exertion gave him. Then Hal sprang into his own saddle, and the two +turned their horses' heads in the direction of the main body of +Cossacks. + +Along the narrow mountain trail they rode slowly for perhaps an hour +without the sight of either friend or foe. Then, rounding a sharp +turning in the pass, at the top of a steep section of the road, Hal +reined in suddenly with a muttered imprecation. Chester followed his +friend's example. + +Perhaps half a mile away came a body of horsemen, perhaps twenty of +them. The sun, shining upon their uniforms, showed them to be Austrians. +Quickly Hal leaped from his horse, and putting forth his utmost +strength, rolled several great stones into place across the road, +absolutely barring the pass. Then, after Chester had been helped to the +ground, the two lads dropped behind this barrier. + +The pass at this point was hardly wide enough for four men to walk +abreast. On each side walls of rock rose straight up for perhaps twenty +feet. Hal looked at his two revolvers and the one he had taken from the +women in the house. + +"Lucky we have plenty of ammunition," he said calmly. + +He tested all weapons carefully and loaded them. Then he passed one to +Chester. + +"I am keeping two," he explained, "because, being wounded, you probably +won't be able to move about as quickly as I will. I don't know how long +we shall be able to hold these fellows off; but if they don't rush us, +we may be able to hold out till help arrives." + +"If they were Germans I wouldn't feel quite so easy," said Chester; "but +I don't believe there is much likelihood of Austrians rushing us." + +"Right you are," said Hal cheerfully. "They'll probably dismount, hide +behind their horses and try to pick us off." + +As yet the Austrians were unaware of the presence of enemies in the pass +above them. They came on slowly, laughing and talking. Then one, +chancing to raise his head, saw the barrier in the pass. He called the +attention of the others to it. No sign of an enemy was visible, but the +Austrians approached very carefully. + +The two lads waited until the Austrians were so close that a miss was +impossible, then, taking deliberate aim, each fired once. Two of the +enemy fell to the roadside. + +There came a cry of dismay from the Austrians, and they reined in their +horses and sprang to the ground. + +But two of them had not been quick enough, and while they left their +horses at practically the same time as did the others, they did not rise +again to their feet. + +"Four!" said Chester calmly. + +"About ten, if Alexis were doing the counting," said Hal grimly. "But I +would give a whole lot if he were here right now." + +The Austrians forced their horses to lie down, and took up their +positions behind them. Then they blazed away wildly at the barrier +ahead. They could see nothing at which to shoot, however, and their +bullets did no damage. + +"I wonder if the Austrians know this old hat trick?" said Chester. + +Picking up a little stick, he put his cap upon it and raised it slowly +over the barrier. A hail of bullets flew about it. Chester took +deliberate aim at one of the Austrians who exposed himself, and Hal at +another. Again their revolvers cracked once each, and two Austrians bit +the dust. + +"We'll be on even terms soon, if we keep this up," said Hal gleefully. + +Chester tried the cap trick again; but this time it did not work. The +Austrians had learned a lesson. + +For perhaps five minutes there was silence; then Hal, glancing quickly +over the barrier, saw one of the enemy jump to his feet and dash +straight toward the barrier. In his anxiety to pick the man off, Hal +fired too quickly, and missed. + +The man dashed on and flung himself to the ground right up against the +barrier. Here, for the moment, he was safe, for the lads could not get +at him without leaning over the barrier and thus exposing themselves to +the fire of the others. + +A second Austrian leaped to his feet and dashed forward. This time, +however, Hal did not hurry, and picked the man off with ease. Hardly had +his weapon spoken, when a shot from below went whizzing by his head. Hal +tumbled back to safety rapidly. + +"Great Scott!" he exclaimed. "We'll have to get that fellow away from +there. He almost got me that time." + +"Yes; but how?" demanded Chester. + +Hal considered the situation for some moments in silence. Then he passed +one of his two revolvers to Chester. + +"You blaze away as rapidly as you can at the Austrians with those two +guns," he said. "Never mind whether you see anything to shoot at or not. +Just shoot when I give the word. That'll keep those fellows under cover. +I'll attend to this one." + +"What are you going to do?" asked Chester. + +"I'm going over after him!" said Hal grimly. + +"But he is liable to kill you!" exclaimed Chester in alarm. + +"If I don't get him," said Hal quietly, "he is sure to kill us both +before long. Here goes!" + +At the moment that he sprang to the top of the barrier, Chester opened +upon the Austrians with both weapons. The man on the opposite side of +the barrier was taken by surprise by Hal's sudden action. Hal toppled +over upon him without warning. With a startled cry the Austrian raised +his weapon to fire, but Hal was too quick for him. + +His revolver, less than a foot from the man's head, spoke sharply. Hal +waited long enough to see that the work had been well done, then rose to +his feet, placed his hand upon the barrier, and, amid a hail of bullets +from the other Austrians, vaulted back to safety. + +"I got him!" he told Chester quietly, as he turned and emptied his own +revolver at the enemy, who seemed on the point of rushing forward. + +Quickly Chester reloaded his own revolvers, and it was well that he did +so, for the enemy seemed to be manifesting a desire to come forward to +the attack, apparently believing that the lads were out of ammunition. + +The lads had now accounted for eight of the enemy, but they were not so +foolish as to believe that the Austrians would remain in their present +position and be picked off one at a time. + +"They'll make a rush soon!" declared Chester. + +"Well," replied Hal, "when they do we'll be ready for 'em. We can shoot +straighter than they can while they are on the run. We should be able to +pick off two more each before they get here." + +"We'll have a try at it," said Chester simply. + +It was plainly evident that the Austrians were preparing for a move of +some kind. Suddenly, at a given signal, all twelve of the foe still +alive, sprang to their feet and made a concerted rush toward the +barrier. + +"Here they come!" cried Hal. "Steady now!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + +IN THE NICK OF TIME. + + +Hal, at the right of the barrier, confined his attention to that side of +the road, leaving Chester to deal with the enemy rushing forward on the +left. Three times the weapon of each lad spoke, and at each shot an +Austrian fell to the ground. Firing coolly and deliberately at such +close quarters, a miss was absolutely impossible. + +But the lads did not have time to fire again. The enemy was at the +barrier; but, instead of hurling themselves over it, as both lads had +expected they would, they dropped to the ground on the opposite side of +the big rocks, and there they remained. + +It was indeed a peculiar situation--the enemies less than six feet +apart, separated only by a few rocks. Still the Austrians, in spite of +their losses, outnumbered the lads three to one. + +Now the rocks of the barrier began to move inward toward the lads. + +"Great Scott!" cried Chester. "They are trying to push these rocks over +on us. If they tumble this barrier over, we can't hope to account for +all six of them." + +The lads braced themselves against the rocks; but the strength of the +two was not as great as the strength of the six. Such a contest could +have but one ending. The boys realized this as well as did their foes. + +"Well," said Hal calmly, "it looks as though they had us. All ready for +a last stand, Chester?" + +"All ready," replied Chester calmly. + +"When I say jump," instructed Hal, "leap backward!" + +Chester nodded in understanding of this plan. + +"Now!" cried Hal. "Jump!" + +Both lads leaped quickly backward, and as they did so, the +barrier--freed of their supporting shoulders--tumbled inward, while the +six Austrians sprawled on the ground. For a moment the lads had the +advantage and they made the best of it. + +Hal's revolver spoke and one Austrian straightened out in the act of +rising. Chester accounted for another, and then both lads sprang in +close upon the foe, thus precluding the use of the foe's firearms. + +Hal, grappling with two of the enemy, was giving a good account of +himself; but Chester, weak from the loss of blood, was unable to hold +his own. A blow from the butt of one of the Austrian's revolvers and he +went to the ground. + +At that moment, from their rear, came the sound of rapidly galloping +hoofs. Around the bend some distance away dashed a troop of Cossacks, +Alexis himself at their head. The giant Cossack took in the situation +with one comprehensive glance and put spurs to his horse. The two +Austrians who had attacked Chester saw the advancing Cossacks, and, +turning, took to their heels. + +The two with whom Hal struggled, however, were too busily occupied to +notice the approach of reenforcements and sorely, each trying to bring +his revolver to bear. + +Alexis now jumped from his horse and dashed forward toward the three. He +stretched forth two mighty hands and plucked the Austrians off the lad. +Raising each high in the air, he stretched wide his arms, and then +brought them together with great force. There was a crunch as the heads +of the two met with terrific force. Then they hung limp in the giant's +hands. He hurled them from him with a disdainful gesture, and, snatching +his revolver from its holster, dropped to his knee and fired two shots +in quick succession at the two remaining enemy, who were fleeing down +the road. + +His aim was true, and as the last of the Austrians bit the dust, Alexis +turned to where Chester lay and picked him up gently in his arms. From +his canteen he poured water over the lad's face and soon came signs of +returning consciousness. Then he laid him gently on the ground and +turned to Hal. + +He gazed first at the lad, then at the dead bodies of the enemy and then +back to Hal. + +"Hm-m-m," he said gruffly. "Quite a fight. But where would you have been +if Alexis had not arrived so opportunely?" + +"Dead, I guess," replied Hal quietly. "We owe you our lives, but there +is no need to tell you that we are grateful." + +"Not a bit," said Alexis. "Thanks from one brave man to another are +never necessary; but did you see how easily I disposed of those four +Austrians?" + +"It was very pretty," replied Hal. + +"Wasn't it?" cried the giant gleefully. "Still, it was a trifle. I +remember the time that I----" + +Hal walked over to Chester's side and bent down and so did not hear the +story of Alexis' might. The giant looked sorrowfully after him for a +moment, muttered to himself and then he walked after him. + +Chester now sat up and looked about. His eyes rested on the dead bodies. + +"Looks like Alexis had been here," he muttered, for he had not yet seen +the giant. + +Alexis heard him and his face glowed with pleasure. + +"He is here," he said, stepping forward. + +Chester's face lighted up. + +"By Jove!" he exclaimed. "It is good to see you. We have wished several +times in the last hour that you were with us. We needed you badly. +However, you arrived just in time." + +Alexis blushed like a schoolboy, for he was not used to hearing others +praise his prowess. + +"Yes, I did arrive in the nick of time," he said awkwardly. "But come, +we must get away from here." + +"Have you learned the strength of the enemy in the mountains?" asked Hal +a few minutes later, as they rode along down the pass. + +"I learned enough to make sure that, without infantry and artillery +support, the cavalry will probably be annihilated," replied Alexis +briefly. "By a dash, we might be able to reach the plains of Hungary, +but without support we should end our days there. I shall counsel +retreat." + +"But I thought you would never counsel retreat?" said Hal, smiling. + +"For myself, never!" replied the giant. "But there are more lives than +mine depending upon this. Therefore I say retreat." + +Alexis was as good as his word. Upon their return to the main column, +Alexis was called into consultation with the commanding officer. He +recounted what he had learned, and urged that the retreat be begun at +once. + +"There are half a million men in these hills," he informed his +commander, "and they are trying to draw us on. We will be allowed to go +so far, and then they will close in on us. One hundred or two hundred +thousand, I don't mind. We could whip them with ease; but half a million +are too many for sixty thousand. If we had not outdistanced our infantry +and artillery, we might do it, but without them, no." + +"Still," said the commanding officer, "I have set my heart on striking +one more blow at the enemy. Would you counsel against it?" + +"I am always in favor of striking one more blow at the enemy," replied +Alexis. "I suppose I should counsel against it, but I will not." + +"Good!" exclaimed his commander. "One decisive blow to the enemy in the +hills, and then we shall fall back into Galicia. Now, where are the +Austrians massed?" + +"It will be extremely hazardous," said Alexis slowly, "but I guess it +can be done. Fifteen miles straight along this mountain pass you come to +a small plateau. I advanced that far myself. Encamped there are in the +neighborhood of one hundred thousand of the enemy. By a quick and silent +dash and a night attack, we may be able to deal them a crushing blow; +but even so, we must fall back immediately. Even then we shall be +greatly harassed by the foe." + +"Well," said the commander, "we shall make the attack, come what may +afterward." + +Alexis saluted his commander and returned to where he had left the two +lads, where he repeated his interview. Then he turned to Chester. + +"It is too bad," he said, "that you will be unable to take part in the +battle." + +"But I shall take part in it," exclaimed the lad. "You don't think I am +going to sit idle while there is fighting going on, do you?" + +"I am afraid you cannot help yourself," replied Hal. "You will go with +the advance, of course; but you will be kept well in the rear." + +In vain did Chester protest. His commanding officer overruled all of his +complaints, and at last the lad was forced to make his way to the rear +of the Russian army. All that day the army rested, and it was not until +the following afternoon that the signal was given for the advance, for +the Russian commander had so timed his movement that he would come upon +the enemy after nightfall. + +It was indeed an imposing sight, these 60,000 men, able to march +scarcely six abreast through the narrow mountain pass, moving hurriedly +through the midst of the wild Carpathians. For miles they stretched out, +but they advanced rapidly, and long before night the advance guard was +within sight of the Austrian position. + +This was made known to the Russian commander by his scouts; and still +out of sight, the Cossacks halted. + +The pass was considerably wider here, and the men spread out somewhat. +Outposts were thrown out to guard against a counter surprise attack, and +the men allowed to lie down and rest. + +The battle formation was preserved, however, and the men fell to sleep +upon their arms, each and every one ready to spring up and dash forward +at a moment's notice. + +And still the Austrians were unaware of their approach. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + +THE SURPRISE. + + +Stealthily the vanguard of the Cossacks crept forward afoot. They had +dismounted that they might approach the enemy with less danger of being +heard. Naked blades were held firmly in their hands; revolvers and hand +grenades were ready. The night attack of the Cossacks was under way. + +Not a shot had been fired. Silently they stole on toward the sleeping +Austrian camp. Feeling perfectly secure in the mountain fastness and +believing their position practically impregnable, the Austrians failed +to keep vigilant watch. + +Now the first line of Cossacks, at a whispered word of command, fell to +the ground on their faces. A sentry walked directly toward them, but in +the blackness of the night he did not make out the silent forms. + +As he turned his back on them, one shadowy form rose quickly to his feet +and moved swiftly forward. There was the sound of a brief struggle, a +cry stifled in his throat and the Cossacks moved forward again. + +A second and then a third time this operation was repeated. Three +Austrian sentinels lay dead upon the ground; still the camp slept on, +unsuspecting. + +More swiftly now, other troops issued from the mountain pass and spread +out in a great semi-circle over the plateau. For two hours this movement +continued in the darkness. The first line of Cossacks stood ready to +fire at the first sign of discovery, but, undiscovered, waited for the +rest of the force to get in position. + +A dog in the Austrian camp barked. Others took up the cry. A sentry, +aware of some strange sensation, fired his rifle in the air. At the +moment the last of the Cossacks issued from the mountain pass. These +last troops were mounted and stood with bared lances awaiting the word +to charge. + +The huge Austrian camp stirred along its length, but at that instant the +Cossacks sprang to action. Came quick commands from the officers, and +the first line moved upon the Austrian camp at a dead run. A hail of +revolver bullets sped through the canvas of the tents, striking down +those who were yet asleep and reaping a toll of death among those who +were dashing to arms. Then the Cossacks charged with cold steel. + +In little parties, without the semblance of formation or discipline, the +Austrians dashed from their tents to beat back this sudden attack. There +was no time for them to fall into position. The Cossacks were upon them. +Right into the heart of the enemy's camp rushed the fearless horde in a +terrible charge, cutting, slashing, hewing their way through. + +The Austrians, caught unprepared, gave ground. The Cossacks followed up +their first advantage closely, pressing the enemy so that they had no +time to get into battle formation. A squad of Cossacks sprang toward a +battery of field pieces, quickly wheeled it into position, and opened +fire on the fleeing Austrians. The execution was fearful. Men went down +in heaps, and those that survived fled faster than before. + +The surprise was complete. A terrible confusion reigned among the enemy. +The Russians pursued them relentlessly. Here and there men threw down +their arms and surrendered by the hundreds. + +Other mountain batteries now had been seized by the Cossacks and turned +upon the foe. For a mile the Cossacks pursued the beaten enemy; then +drew off as suddenly as they had come. Prisoners were abandoned. Quickly +the big guns were put out of commission, and the advance guard--now the +rearguard--fell back slowly, protecting the retreat of those in front. + +In almost less time than it takes to tell it, the Cossacks were again in +the saddle and dashing back down the mountain pass. + +The Austrians, for a moment, were unable to form in solid ranks. But, at +length, under the command of their officers, they formed and gave chase. +But the Cossacks had too great a start. The losses of the Austrians had +been terrible, those of the Cossacks comparatively slight. In spite of +the fact that they had been in the midst of the fighting, Hal and Alexis +had escaped without injury. + +Now the Austrian cavalry, having had time to form, scattered on each +side of the pass and rode after the Cossacks. They came up with the rear +guard, and from the sides poured in bullets, until they were forced to +draw rein because of the treacherous nature of the ground on either +hand. It was here that the Cossacks sustained their heaviest losses. + +But the raid had been a success; there could be no doubt about that. + +The Russian commander was elated as, in the midst of his men, he ordered +the retreat; but as the retreat continued, it became more hazardous. +Even as Alexis had predicted, the mountains swarmed with the enemy, who +rained bullets upon the Russian columns from every hand. + +In spite of this, however, by noon of the following day the Cossacks had +reached the spot from which they had started the day before; and here a +halt was called. Videttes were placed and the troops settled down for a +brief rest. While they made a good mark for the guerillas, they +nevertheless were in too great force to permit of an attack in force. + +Night fell, and once more the troops sprang to the saddle and continued +their retreat. Morning found the vanguard well out of the mountains on +the plains of Galicia, and soon the last of the rear guard had issued +from the pass. Then the mighty columns spread out. There was no pursuit, +and the commander ordered the retreat conducted more slowly. + +Two days later the columns of raiding Cossacks rode in among the Russian +troop besieging the Galician city of Cracow. Here the commander decided +to remain until he should receive instructions from the Grand Duke. He +dispatched Chester, who had now recovered sufficiently from his wounds +as to be feeling perfectly fit, Hal and Alexis to carry word of the +expedition to the Grand Duke. So the three friends again set out upon a +journey. + +They traveled without haste and without incident and at length found +themselves once more in Lodz. Here all three reported to the Russian +commander-in-chief. After receiving his congratulations, and while they +yet stood in his presence, there came a terrible roar from outside the +tent. + +The Grand Duke listened intently. Thousands upon thousands of voices +rose on the air. They were cheering. Thousands upon thousands of voices +took up the cry: + +"God save the Czar!" + +The Grand Duke advanced rapidly toward the entrance to his tent. The two +lads and the giant Cossack made as if to depart; but the Grand Duke, +with a movement of his hand, signified for them to stay and so they +remained. + +The sound of cheering drew nearer. The Grand Duke left the tent, and +through the door the lads could see him standing with bared head. Came +the sound of galloping hoofs, and a cavalry troop drew up at the Grand +Duke's tent. The latter stepped forward, and giving his hand to a +brilliantly uniformed man, assisted him to dismount. Then, bowing low, +he escorted his visitor into his tent. + +As they appeared in the small enclosure Alexis fell upon his knee, and +bowed till his head all but touched the ground. + +Nicholas, the Czar of all the Russias, turned toward the three with a +question on his lips. But the Grand Duke spoke first: + +"These, sire, are three of your majesty's bravest soldiers, who have +only now returned from a successful raid into the heart of the +Carpathians." + +The Czar glanced at the two lads. + +"But these," he said, pointing his finger at Hal and Chester, "are not +Russians." + +"No, sire," replied the Grand Duke. "They are American lads; but they +have rendered invaluable services to our cause," and while the lads +stood listening, he gave the Czar a brief account of some of their +experiences. + +The Czar advanced and placed a hand upon the shoulder of each. + +"I am glad," he said in perfect English, "to know you; and I envy my +cousin George the services of such gallant youths." + +Both lads bowed in acknowledgment of this compliment, and the Czar +turned to Alexis, who was still kneeling. + +"And this man," he said, "surely he is one of my Cossacks?" + +"Yes, your majesty," replied the Grand Duke. "There is not a braver in +the whole army," and he related some of Alexis' feats, as told him days +before by Hal and Chester. + +The Czar stretched forth a hand to Alexis, and the latter kissed it. + +"You shall be remembered," said the Russian monarch. + +Alexis' face glowed with pleasure. He was so taken by surprise that he +was unable to speak. + +The Grand Duke now signified that the three might leave the tent, and +they accordingly bowed themselves out. Outside Alexis could restrain +himself no longer. + +"I told you I was a brave man!" he cried; "but I am even braver than I +thought. I have been addressed by the Czar!" + +An officer entered the Grand Duke's tent, and departed a moment later in +great haste. A second later and the shrill call of a bugle carried +through the town. It was the order for inspection. The Czar was about to +review his troops. + +An hour later Czar Nicholas stood before his army, or such a part of it +as could be crowded in the plain before the Grand Duke's tent. Far out +it stretched on all sides. In a short address, in which he praised his +troops for their gallantry in action, the Czar predicted that success +would eventually crown the Russian arms. Then he turned to an officer of +the Grand Duke's staff and gave a command. + +Immediately the latter approached Hal, Chester and Alexis, who, being +apart from their regiments, stood a little to one side watching the +ceremonies. + +"Follow me!" he commanded. + +Without a word the three obeyed. Straight to the Czar the officer led +the way, the two lads and the Cossack wondering what it was all about. +In front of the Russian monarch the officer withdrew, leaving them alone +before the Czar. + +The Russian ruler stepped between the three, with a smile on his face +drew something from his pocket, approached each in turn and pinned +something on his breast. + +Alexis, Hal and Chester let their eyes drop to these objects, and all +three cried out in surprise. + +For the Czar of Russia, there in the presence of the army of Poland, +before the Grand Duke and other Russian nobles and dignitaries, with the +eyes of the entire assemblage focused upon them, had pinned upon the +breasts of the two American lads and the giant Cossack the Cross of the +Order of St. George! + +It was their reward for bravery, and a great cheer went up from the +assembled hosts. + + + + +CHAPTER XXV. + +A NEW MISSION. + + +The two lads were again having an audience of the Grand Duke. The +latter, after ordering them to bear word to the commander of the Cossack +force that had invaded the Carpathians to remain before Cracow until +further notice, had also proposed a new mission to the lads. + +"I would like to learn," he said, "whether there is any truth in the +report that, in the event we capture Cracow, the population of Galicia +will come to our support and throw off the Austrian yoke. Of course I +have heard these rumors from apparently reliable sources, but I would +prefer to know the truth from someone I can trust implicitly." + +"We shall be glad to undertake that mission, Your Excellency," said Hal. +"I believe that by using a little strategy we can gain entrance to the +city. It would probably be easier for us than for one of your own men, +because we are Americans and may be able to use that to advantage." + +"I had thought of that," replied the Grand Duke. "In fact, it is for +that reason that I selected you. I will give you a message to your +commander, relieving you from active duty. My advice is that you do not +take Alexis on this mission. He would probably hinder you." + +The boys saluted, and taking the paper the Grand Duke extended to them, +departed. On their way back toward Cracow they informed Alexis of their +mission and of the fact that he was not to accompany them. The Cossack +was disappointed and astonished. + +"Not take me!" he exclaimed in surprise. "Why, I am good for fifty men! +You know that!" + +"But this is not a case of strength and fighting," Hal explained. "This +is a case where strategy will count more than a hundred men." + +"Well," demanded Alexis, "am I not a strategist? Did you not tell me so +with your own lips? As a strategist there is none better than I. Why, I +can tell you how I----" + +"But, Alexis," Hal interrupted, "one look at you would tell an Austrian +your nationality. You cannot expect to fool them as we did the peasant +of the hills. I am sorry, but there is no help for it." + +Alexis was greatly crestfallen, but he admitted the truth of the boys' +reasoning. + +"It is true that anyone would know I am a Cossack," he replied, "but if +it came to a fight----" + +"If it comes to a fight," said Chester, "we shall miss you greatly; but +we shall have to try and get along without you this time." + +Back with their regiment they gave the message releasing them from +active duty to their commander; then, changing their uniforms for +civilian garb and bidding Alexis good-by, they set out in the direction +of the Galician stronghold, making a wide detour so as to approach from +the north, rather than from the direction of the Russian troops in the +East. + +They went horseback, and they rode slowly, for they did not wish to +attract undue attention to themselves by too great speed. The route they +traversed made it a good two-days' journey, and long before coming to +the city proper they encountered bands of Austrian troops. To these, +however, they paid little heed and they were not molested. + +"Evidently they don't care who goes in," remarked Chester. + +"Looks that way," replied Hal; "but I'll bet they pay strict attention +to anyone who tries to get out. That's where our hardest work probably +will come in." + +"I guess you are right," said Chester. + +Nevertheless they were halted by an Austrian patrol when close to the +city. To him, however, they explained that they were American tourists, +caught in Galicia at the outbreak of the war, and that they had +penetrated beyond the Austrian lines without being aware of it. + +"We want to get back to safety," Hal told him. + +The Austrian officer smiled and let them pass without further words. +Inside the Galician city the lads prowled about leisurely. The extreme +eastern end of the city was a mass of ruins. The shells hurled by the +big Russian guns had done great damage; but the flames had been +extinguished before they had reached the heart of the city, and as the +Russians had later fallen back a considerable distance the city now was +perfectly quiet. + +Night came on, and the lads sought shelter in the home of a Galician +peasant. The house was small but comfortable, and the old man who lived +in it admitted them without question. They repeated to him the story +told the Austrian officer, adding that the place in which they had been +staying had been destroyed by a Russian shell. + +"And your sympathies," inquired the old man, "are with the Austrians?" + +"Of course," replied Hal quietly, "Russian barbarism must be wiped out." + +"Good!" replied the old man. "I suppose you know there is considerable +sentiment in favor of the Russians, however?" + +"I have heard something to that effect; but I could scarcely credit it," +replied Hal guardedly. + +"Well," said the old man, "it is true. A plot was discovered not two +days ago to give the city into the hands of the Russians. The +conspirators were arrested right here in my house. They were friends of +mine. I was known to be loyal, and my false friends took advantage of +that fact to do their plotting here. Now my house is watched closely, +although they have hesitated to arrest me." + +The old man made the two comfortable for the night and left them. Before +preparing for bed the lads talked over what the old man had told them. +As they were getting ready to retire, they heard voices from an +adjoining room. + +Through a little hole in the wall they could see a stream of light. Hal +put his eye to the hole. In the room beyond he made out the figures of +two Austrian officers. Then the lad motioned to Chester to remain +silent, and laid his ear to the hole. + +"You are sure of this other plot?" came a voice. + +"Perfectly; but we will nip it in the bud. There is no question but the +people would welcome a Russian investment of the city. Galicia is +practically in sympathy with the Russians. We have been hard put to it +to keep them from rising and turning the city over to the Czar's +troops." + +"Well, I am sure we are equal to any occasion," said the first speaker. + +Hal turned away from the wall and repeated the conversation to Chester. + +"I guess that's all we need to know," he added. + +"I should say it is," was the reply. "Now the question is, how are we to +get back to our own lines?" + +"I have a plan that may work," said Hal. "It came to me a moment ago." + +"And that is?" prompted Chester. + +"Well," said Hal quietly, "we will exchange clothes with those two +officers in the next room." + +"Good!" cried Chester. + +"Let's start then." + +"Hadn't we better wait until they are asleep?" + +"No; I believe I have a better plan. Come with me." + +Quietly the two lads slipped from the room and down the little hall. +Then they turned and made their way back again, coming only as far as +the door to the Austrians' room. Hal opened it and walked in. At sight +of the two Austrian officers he drew back in well-simulated surprise. + +"I beg your pardon," he exclaimed. "I am in the wrong room." + +"Oh, that's all right," laughed one of the Austrians. "Are you the +Americans who are stopping here?" + +"Yes," replied Hal. + +"Well," said the Austrian. "It's early yet; come in and have a chat with +us. You can perhaps tell us some things about America that we would like +to know." + +Hal accepted the invitation, mentally congratulating himself upon their +good fortune. After a lengthy conversation, Hal rose to go. + +"It's getting late," he said. "Come, Chester, we may as well turn in." + +Chester also rose. In going to the door it was necessary for Hal to pass +behind one of the Austrians. As he did so, he quickly threw out a hand +and clutched the man by the throat. At the same moment Chester sprang +upon the second unsuspecting officer, and the cry that the latter would +have let out was stifled in his throat by the pressure of the lad's +fingers. + +Hal now produced a revolver, and Chester did likewise. They covered the +two officers. + +"One outcry and you are dead men," said Hal calmly. + +While Chester kept them covered, Hal bound and gagged them. Then the two +lads stripped them of their uniforms, which they donned themselves. +Feeling perfectly secure in these, the lads saw that the prisoners were +well tied and unable to cry out, and then left the room, shutting the +door behind them. + +In the hall they encountered their host, but the latter, recognizing the +Austrian uniform, did not even speak to them. The lads left the house +quietly, and turned their faces toward the north, intending to go back +by the way they had come. + +Several times they were spoken to by Austrian officers as they walked +along the streets, but to these salutations they made no reply, trusting +that their apparent rudeness would cast no suspicion upon them. And it +did not. + +At length they came to the farthest Austrian outpost, and here, for the +first time they were challenged. Hal stepped a little ahead of Chester +and spoke. + +"We are inspecting the lines," he said calmly. + +"You cannot pass here," came the reply. "My orders are to shoot anyone +who attempts to get by. The general himself couldn't pass. You will have +to go back." + +"Oh, all right, if that's the way you feel about it," said Hal, turning +his back upon the sentry. + +The sentry, believing that the lads would go away, lowered his rifle, +and in that moment Hal turned quickly again and sprang upon him. A quick +blow knocked the sentry from his feet, and the lads dashed forward. In +the distance Hal made out the form of several horses, and the lads ran +toward them. + +"Quick, Chester!" cried Hal. + +But the Austrian sentry had not been knocked unconscious. He was only +stunned. He staggered to his feet, brought his rifle to his shoulder and +fired. He was too unsteady to aim carefully, however, and the lads were +unhurt. + +But the sound of the shot aroused the Austrian camp. Men came rushing +forward. + +The boys leaped to the backs of two horses and spurred on. + +"It's a race for life, Hal!" shouted Chester, as the horses dashed +ahead. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + +A DASH FOR LIFE. + + +One glance over his shoulder convinced Hal that at least half a dozen of +the enemy had mounted and were spurring forward in pursuit. He passed +the word to Chester, and bending low in their saddles, the lads urged +their horses to greater efforts. + +From ahead suddenly came a body of horsemen. Before they realized it, +the lads were dashing by these at a distance of less than a hundred +yards. Here the Austrian uniforms stood them in good stead. The officer +hesitated to give a command to his men to fire on what were apparently +Austrian officers, and before he was made aware of the situation by +shouts from behind, the lads had placed considerable distance between +themselves and these new enemies. + +Now the latter also turned and gave chase. + +After some minutes the lads realized that they were easily maintaining +their lead and breathed easier. + +"We'll get away yet if our horses don't give out!" shouted Chester. + +"All right!" Hal shouted back. "Keep up the pace!" + +In their haste in seizing upon two horses, the lads had not had time to +look the animals over and it soon developed that they had made a bad +choice. The animals which the boys bestrode had returned only an hour +before from a long and tedious journey, and consequently were almost +exhausted. Under the spur they put forth their best efforts, but finally +they began to tire, and despite the urging of the lads, faltered in +their stride. + +Hal was the first to notice this. + +"I am afraid it is all up!" he shouted to Chester. + +Right in the face of his oncoming enemies he drew rein. Chester followed +his example, and then both lads quickly dismounted. + +At this spot there was a small clump of trees. Slapping their horses +across the flanks with their hats, the lads plunged in among the foliage +while the tired horses made off slowly. + +"Up into these trees quick," shouted Chester. "It has saved us before; +it may again!" + +Quickly the lads clambered up among the branches, where they lay +perfectly still. The sound of the approaching Austrians grew nearer, and +at last half a dozen of the enemy pulled up their mounts almost under +the lads' hiding place. + +"Which way did they go?" asked a voice. + +"They have probably made off through the woods," said a second. "We'll +have to search for them." + +The tree in which the lads were hiding was the largest nearby. Up in its +dense foliage the boys were absolutely hidden from the ground below. One +of the Austrians glanced up into the tree. + +"They may be hiding up here," he said to his companions. + +"Hardly likely," replied a second. + +"Well, I'll send up a couple of shots and see," said the first speaker. + +His rifle spoke sharply twice. Hal felt a slight stinging sensation in +his left arm. One of the bullets, as it passed, brushed his skin. The +other sang close to Chester's head. But in spite of this, and in spite +of the fact that another shot from below might end one of their lives, +neither boy so much as shifted his position. + +After firing the shot into the tree the Austrian became still, +listening, as did his companions. There was no sound. + +"They can't be up there," said a voice. "If they were, and even had not +been hit, they couldn't remain still." + +"You are right," said another voice. "We shall have to look for them +elsewhere. Scatter out, men, and we'll search the woods." + +The Austrians moved from beneath the tree. Waiting until he was sure +that they had gone, Chester whispered to Hal: + +"What shall we do now?" + +"If possible," replied Hal, "we shall slip down and try to pick out a +couple of fresh horses. Then we can make another dash for it." + +"All right," agreed Chester, "but we had better wait here until we can +get down the tree unseen." + +Hal nodded in assent, and for perhaps half an hour the lads waited +silently. In the distance they could hear the enemy beating up the +bushes for some trace of them, but these sounds gradually grew farther +away; then died down altogether. + +Cautiously Hal peered down from his hiding place. There was no sign of +an enemy. The lad dropped quickly to the ground, and Chester followed +suit a moment later. Then they dashed silently toward the road. + +Upon entering the woods in pursuit of the fugitives, the Austrians had +abandoned their horses and were searching afoot. Approaching the edge of +the forest, the lads saw six horses tied to trees. They ran rapidly +toward them. As they did so a single Austrian, who had been left to +guard the animals, stepped suddenly forward, raised his rifle and cried: +"Halt!" + +There was no time for either lad to draw his revolver. Chester's hand +went to his pocket, even as he ran, but he did not wait to extract the +weapon. With his hand still in his pocket, he pointed the muzzle of his +revolver at the Austrian and pressed the trigger. The bullet sped true +through the cloth, and the Austrian dropped his rifle and toppled over +to the ground. + +"Good work, Chester!" shouted Hal, not pausing in his stride toward the +horses. + +He had all six horses untied in a jiffy, and passing the bridle of one +to his chum, leaped lightly into the saddle. Chester did likewise. The +other horses stood still. + +"No use leaving them here for the enemy to pursue us with," decided +Chester. + +He rode his own horse among the others, and with several quick blows of +his cap, started them on ahead of them. + +At that moment, the Austrians who had been scouring the woods for the +fugitives, attracted by the sound of the shot, came into sight and +dashed toward the lads, their revolvers spitting fire as they ran. + +"Come on!" cried Hal to Chester. + +It was no time to hesitate, nor to fight back while there was a chance +of getting away. Putting spurs to their horses both lads were soon out +of range. + +"Now," said Chester, "we shall have to keep a sharp lookout for other +Austrians in front; for it is certain all of our pursuers didn't enter +the woods after us." + +"Right you are," replied Hal. + +They rode forward at a quick trot, and soon were out of sight of the +enemy behind. For perhaps fifteen minutes they continued on their way +without interruption, and then a band of horsemen bore down on them. + +"Austrians," said Chester briefly. "What shall we do?" + +"Go straight ahead," replied Hal quickly. "Perhaps they will not +recognize us. We still have our Austrian uniforms. It may be they will +take us for some of the searching party." + +They drew nearer the approaching horsemen. The latter reined in their +mounts. + +"Did you find them?" Hal called out. + +"No," came back the reply; "did you?" + +"No," said Hal, "they must have given us the slip." + +The horsemen came closer and Hal and Chester kept their faces averted as +much as possible, for they knew that a close scrutiny would betray their +identity. + +"Well," shouted Hal, "we will look a little farther on. You search the +woods. Perhaps your eyes may be better than ours." + +"All right," was the reply, and the boys rode on slowly so as to give +their mounts a rest. Some moments later there was a great commotion +behind, and turning in their saddles, the lads saw the Austrians coming +rapidly after them. They had come upon the little party who had seen the +lads leaving the woods. + +With a cry to Chester, Hal put spurs to his horse and soon both were +literally flying over the ground, the Austrians in full chase. + +But the horses that the boys now bestrode were much fresher than had +been their first mounts; still, Hal saw that several of the Austrians +were gaining. + +Now one of the enemy drew well ahead of his companions, a bit behind +came a second, while a third, who was some distance ahead of the +remainder, closely followed the second. These three, at their respective +distances, slowly drew closer to the lads. + +Suddenly, without a word to Hal, Chester checked his horse abruptly, and +his revolver flashed in his hand. Before the first Austrian could check +his mount, he had come within range of the lad's weapon, which spoke +sharply. The Austrian tumbled sidewise from his horse. + +Chester turned and spurred on after Hal. + +Now the second Austrian drew close upon the lad. Once more the latter +abruptly checked his horse and turned to face the Austrian. The latter, +perceiving the boy's maneuver, also drew rein. But he was not quick +enough, and a second bullet from Chester's revolver laid him low. Once +more the lad turned his horse's head forward and dashed on. + +The third Austrian, unmindful of the fate that had overtaken his two +companions, still dashed after the lads. He gained steadily, and was now +a considerable distance ahead of the main body of the enemy. A third +time Chester turned suddenly on the foe and a third time his revolver +spoke. He missed, and the Austrian opened with his own revolver. But his +aim was no better. + +Chester, sitting quietly on his horse, then took careful and deliberate +aim and at his next shot, the Austrian fell to the ground. Then he +turned and rode on after Hal, who had slowed down to wait for him. + +Once more the lads put spurs to their horses and dashed on--each forward +stride of their animals taking them much nearer the Russian lines and +safety--until at last they made out in the distance the outposts of the +Russian camp. + +Hal raised a cry of triumph, but at the same moment his horse stepped +into a hole and went to his knees, hurling Hal over his head. + +Chester reined in alongside his friend and leaped to the ground. The +Austrians, perceiving the lad's misfortune, bore down on them with a +wild cry of joy. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + +SAFE. + + +In spite of his tumble, Hal was uninjured and sprang quickly to his +feet. Chester turned to the prostrate horse, and attempted to get it to +its feet. The horse moaned with pain, and Chester gave up the attempt, +for he realized in an instant that the animal had broken its leg in the +fall. + +With revolvers in hands, both lads turned to face their foes. + +"We won't give up without a fight!" declared Hal grimly. + +"No, we won't give up without a fight!" Chester agreed. + +Standing behind the horse that was still on its feet the two lads +pointed their weapons at the foe, who bore down upon them at top speed. +There were at least a score of them, and the boys realized that the +encounter could have but one end. Still they were determined to fight it +out. + +But now, from the rear, came a fierce yell. Turning their eyes +momentarily in that direction, the lads beheld a welcome sight. Mounted +on their superb chargers and galloping forward as swiftly as the wind, +came a full squadron of Russian Cossacks; and as they came on, with +loose-hanging reins, waving their weapons in the air, the fierce Cossack +yell split the air time after time. + +The Austrians hesitated; then, not mindful to retreat and allow their +victims, whom they had followed so far, to escape scot-free they +advanced on the lads again. Chester calmly picked off the first man on +the right, and Hal disposed of the first man on the left. Realizing that +assistance was on the way, the boys fought coolly and with +determination, keeping the rearing and plunging horse always between +them and their foes. + +But this protection was soon removed. An Austrian bullet struck the +horse in the head and he fell to the ground. Quickly the lads dropped +behind the prostrate body and continued to pop away at their enemies. +Two more went down, and still the lads were uninjured. The Cossacks were +still some distance away, although approaching with the swiftness of the +wind. The Austrians, seeking to end the encounter, spread out, fan-wise, +and drew in upon the lads from three sides. The lads shifted their +positions so as still to face all their foes. Then the Austrians came +forward on a charge. + +But they had delayed too long, for now the onrushing Cossacks had come +within range, and a powerful voice rang out: + +"Faster!" + +In response to this command, the gallant chargers of the Cossacks leaped +forward. A volley rang out, and bullets whistling over the heads of Hal +and Chester found lodgment in Austrian breasts and heads. The enemy +turned and fled. + +With a quick word of command to his men the Cossack captain, now close +to the kneeling lads, pulled in his horse with a sudden movement and +sprang to the ground. The rest of the troop continued its mad dash after +the Austrians, who were fleeing as fast as their tired horses could +carry them. + +There was but one possible result of such a chase. Noble animals, though +the Austrian horses were, they were no match, at their best, for the +Cossack chargers. And there was no mercy in the hearts of the Cossacks +for their enemies. The Austrians did not cry for quarter, and no quarter +was given. Ten minutes later the Cossacks, their ranks thinned by four, +returned to where their leader had dismounted beside the lads. + +As the Cossack commander flung himself to the ground by their side, both +lads gave a cry of glad surprise. + +"Alexis!" they exclaimed in a single voice. + +"The same!" replied their Cossack friend. "Don't tell me any more about +your strategy. Where would you have been, if I hadn't arrived just now, +eh?" + +"Well," said Chester slowly, "we wouldn't be here." + +"You would have been dead, that's where you would have been," said +Alexis calmly. "As it was, I almost arrived too late. Perhaps next time +you will not leave me behind." + +"We won't try to thank you," said Hal. "But how did you happen to arrive +so opportunely?" + +"Why," replied Alexis, "looking across the plain I saw two horsemen +pursued by many others. I knew you would return from that direction, and +I surmised who it was. But here is one case where my keen eyesight +almost worked to your disadvantage. I made out your Austrian uniforms, +even as I would have ordered my men forward, and hesitated. It wasn't +any of my business if two Austrians were killed. Then I remembered your +talk of strategy, and guessed that maybe the uniforms were part of it. +But, you may take my word for it, you almost used too much strategy." + +Alexis now ordered one of his men to secure two of the riderless horses, +and, mounting, the lads rode back toward the Russian lines with the +Cossack troop. Here they wasted no time, but started at once on their +return journey to Lodz, Alexis, having obtained permission from his +superior officer, going with them. + +Grand Duke Nicholas was well pleased with the lads' report and +complimented them highly upon their bravery and resourcefulness. Then he +added, somewhat sorrowfully, the lads thought: + +"I shall indeed be sorry to lose you." + +"To lose us!" exclaimed Chester, in surprise. "Why, Your Excellency, we +have no intention of being killed." + +"I didn't mean that," replied the Grand Duke, with a slight smile, "but +I have other work of importance for you. In fact, I may say of greater +importance than any which you have yet accomplished." + +"And we shall be glad to undertake it, no matter what it is," said Hal. +"I am sure we can carry it through successfully." + +"So am I," replied the Grand Duke dryly. "After some of the things you +have done, I would not say there is anything you cannot do." + +"But this new mission?" questioned Hal. + +"The new mission," replied the Grand Duke, "will carry you back into +France." + +"What!" exclaimed both lads in surprise. + +"Exactly," said the Grand Duke. "That is why I said I would be sorry to +lose you, for I know that, once back with the British troops, you will +not return again to Russia." + +"Well, Your Excellency," said Chester, "we have seen service with the +Cossacks, and we like it immensely, but----" + +"But," interrupted the Grand Duke, "you would much prefer to be fighting +with the English, your own people, or a kindred people, at least. Is +that it?" + +Both lads bowed in assent. + +"It is, Your Excellency," replied Hal. + +"Well," said the Grand Duke, "so be it." + +He drew from his pocket a document, which he placed in Hal's hands. + +"This," he said, "you will place in the hands of either Sir John French, +the British commander, or General Joffre, the French commander-in-chief. +I could, of course, send the message by wireless to London, but it would +be intercepted by the Germans, and, while it naturally would be sent in +code, I am not at all sure that the Germans could not decipher it." + +"When shall we start, Your Excellency?" asked Chester. + +"Whenever it is convenient," was the reply. "And the manner of your +going I leave entirely to you. I will not hamper you with instructions." + +"Your Excellency," said Hal, struck with a sudden thought. + +"Yes?" + +"I should like to make a request." + +"Consider it granted," said the Grand Duke. + +"Well, then," said Hal, "I should like to ask permission to take Alexis +with us." + +The Grand Duke was plainly surprised. + +"He may be of great aid to us in getting through," Hal explained. "His +strength is prodigious, and more than once, as I have told you, has +stood us in good stead." + +"Well," said the Grand Duke thoughtfully, "I will not order him to +accompany you, for he would be out of his element on the other side; +but, if he is willing to go, he has my permission." + +After some further talk the boys took a friendly farewell of the +commander-in-chief of the Russian armies and left the tent. They hunted +up Alexis immediately. + +"Well, Alexis," said Hal, "to-morrow we start back for France!" + +The giant Cossack was on his feet in a moment. + +"You mean you are going away for good?" he asked. + +"Yes," replied Chester. + +Alexis, although not an emotional man, was stirred deeply. The boys +realized it in an instant; but he was not the man to give way to his +feelings, and he said simply: + +"I am sorry. I wish that you would remain here." + +Then Hal broached his plan. + +"Alexis," he said, "how would you like to come with us?" + +The giant looked at him in surprise. + +"Go with you?" he exclaimed. "To France?" + +"Yes." + +"But what would I do in France?" he questioned. + +"Fight!" replied Chester briefly. + +"True!" muttered Alexis. + +"The Grand Duke has given his permission, if you desire to go," said +Hal, "and we would indeed be glad to have you. We have grown very fond +of you." + +"And I of you," replied Alexis. + +"In France," said Chester, "there are no such men as you. You would be a +veritable Hercules, a man among men. Brave men there are there in +plenty, but none such as you." + +His vanity thus appealed to, Alexis saw the matter in a different light. +He slapped one great fist down upon the table in a mighty blow. + +"I'll go!" he shouted. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + +ON NEUTRAL SOIL. + + +"Surely you are not afraid, Alexis?" exclaimed Chester. + +"Afraid!" shouted Alexis. "Of course I am not afraid. But"--he eyed the +large aeroplane dubiously--"but a man was not made to fly about in the +air like a bird, particularly a man of my weight. Besides, I do not like +great height. If I stand upon a precipice, I am immediately struck with +the notion that I must jump off. If I jumped from an aeroplane I might +upset it." + +Both Hal and Chester laughed. + +"I was that way myself once," said Chester, "so I know just how you +feel. Many a man, otherwise very brave, has that same horror of height. +However, you will soon get used to it." + +"Maybe so," said Alexis dubiously. "However, if one man can fly, why, so +can I. I am willing to take a chance." + +"Good!" exclaimed Hal. "Now to get started." + +Leaving Lodz, the three had made their way north, keeping as close to +the German border as was safe, until they had reached Riga, on the Gulf +of Riga, which extends in from the Baltic Sea. Here they had at first +thought of going part of the distance by boat, but, because of the +likelihood of the approach of German warships in the Baltic, had given +up this plan and decided upon an aeroplane. + +"We came to Russia in an airship," Hal had said. "We might as well go +back in one. Besides, it is quicker." + +And so it was agreed. + +Ten miles south of Riga, surrounded by Russian airmen, they climbed into +the craft which the Russian commander in the little city had provided +for them. The plane was large and roomy, having a seating capacity of +five. + +Hal took his place at the steering wheel and Chester climbed aboard. + +Still eyeing the flying craft suspiciously, Alexis followed Chester, +and, sitting down suddenly, took hold of the seat with both hands and +hung on for dear life, although the craft was still upon the ground. +Then he lowered his head and shut his eyes. + +Hal gave the word, and willing hands started the machine along the +ground. Gradually it gained momentum until it was skimming over the +ground at a rapid gait. Then Hal threw over the elevating lever, and the +machine shot into the air amid the cheers of the Russians below. + +Alexis was conscious of a sinking sensation in the region of his +stomach, and he ducked his head even lower as the car rose higher in the +air. + +"Look up, Alexis!" shouted Chester, reaching over and laying a hand on +the Cossack's arm. + +Now that the machine had reached a good height, Hal held it steady, and +it darted ahead on a straightaway course. The plane shook with the +vibrations of the engine, but otherwise there was scarcely a noticeable +motion. + +Now that the machine was more steady, Alexis, in response to Chester's +command, slowly opened his eyes and looked about. Seeing nothing, he +closed them again immediately, and again ducked his head. Once more +Chester yelled at him to look about, and at last Alexis raised his head +and glanced into the distance. + +"This is a terrible place for a man to be," he muttered with a shudder. +"If man were meant to fly he would have been given wings. It is tempting +the wrath of the elements to be here." + +As he looked about him, however, and became conscious of the steadiness +of the craft, his composure returned, and soon he was making inquiries +regarding the construction of the craft, its speed and the height to +which it could ascend. He glanced over the side of the machine, and then +looked quickly upward again. The one glance below had made him ill. + +He smiled faintly. "I can't look down yet," he said ruefully. "I suppose +I'll get used to it in time; but now I had better keep my eyes inside." + +"How fast are we going, Hal?" asked Chester. + +"Sixty-five miles an hour," was Hal's reply. + +Alexis was astonished. + +"Sixty-five miles!" he ejaculated. "Why, it seems as if we were standing +still." + +"If we were close enough to the earth you would soon notice the +difference," said Chester. + +For another hour they continued on their way without incident, and then +Chester discovered the dim outline of a second aircraft trailing them at +a distance. It was not gaining, but even when Hal put on more speed, at +a word from Chester, he was unable to shake it off. + +"Evidently a German," said Chester. "I suppose he wants to see where we +are going." + +For another hour the plane pursued them. Then Chester perceived that +there were two instead of one, and that both were creeping up on them. + +With a cry to Hal, Chester picked two rifles from the bottom of the car. + +"We'll have to fight them off!" he cried. + +Alexis stirred uneasily in his seat. + +"I was afraid of it," he muttered. "Now, what will happen to me when I +go hurtling through space to the ground below?" + +He shuddered. + +Hal, in response to a command from Chester, slowed down suddenly. Taking +careful aim at one of the pursuers, Chester emptied the magazine of his +first rifle. There came from behind the sounds of screams, followed by +an explosion. + +"What was that?" cried Alexis in alarm. + +"I got one of them!" replied Chester calmly. "The plane has gone to +earth." + +The second pursuing plane reduced its speed, but still clung on the +trail of its would-be prey. + +"We'll have to dispose of it some way, Hal," shouted Chester. "Turn +quickly and run toward it, and I'll see if I can't send it to the +ground." + +He held his rifle ready as he spoke. Reducing the speed of the craft a +trifle, Hal brought its head about in a wide circle; then darted +suddenly toward the enemy. + +But the latter was not caught unprepared, and a rifle bullet whistled +close to Alexis' ear. + +The giant Cossack clapped a hand to his head and for the first time +looked toward the enemy. Then, reaching to the bottom of the machine, he +raised up with a weapon, and, aiming at the hull of the enemy in the +distance, poured the entire contents of the magazine into it. At the +same moment a well-directed shot from Chester's rifle struck the pilot. +He sprang to his feet, spun around crazily, and plunged from the car. A +moment later and the aeroplane blew up with a loud bang. + +Alexis, who had seen the pilot go overboard, let out a cry of dismay. He +could not help but think of the terrible fall to the ground. + +"Good work, Alexis!" cried Chester. "I told you you would get used to it +before long." + +"I am not used to it," replied the giant, "but when a bullet whistles +past my ear I get mad. I just naturally have to fight back." + +Nevertheless he made a brave effort to appear unconcerned, and he took a +look over the side. At that moment Hal allowed the car to glide slowly +nearer the earth. For a moment Alexis was unaware of this sinking +sensation; but suddenly treetops came into view, and the Cossack let out +a cry of alarm: + +"We're sinking!" he exclaimed. + +Hal laughed. + +"Just coming down to get a look about," he replied. "Now, if you will +look over at the earth a few moments, you will soon overcome your +uneasiness." + +Alexis, taking a long breath, did so; and he continued to peer over the +side, even after Hal, touching the elevating lever, sent the plane high +in the air again. + +Darkness fell and still the 'plane sped on. Then, so suddenly that they +seemed to spring up from nowhere, the swiftly moving aeroplane was +surrounded on all sides--as it seemed to the voyagers--by a score of +hostile aircraft, while shots rang out from several sides. + +Hal acted promptly, as had always been his wont. He allowed the 'plane +to drop a good quarter of a mile with a sudden lurch, and then righting +it, darted forward again. For a moment they had shaken off the foe, but +the latter was not long in finding them. Searchlights flashed in the +sky, seeking out the prey. + +By a series of clever maneuvers, Hal succeeded in evading the hostile +craft during the long hours of the night, turning first this way and +then that, rising and falling. But with the first gray of dawn, it +became plain to both boys that escape was practically impossible. +Looking down Hal saw water below him, and at the same moment the hostile +air fleet ten 'planes strong, swooped down on them. + +Chester's rifle cracked, as did that of Alexis. Bullets flew about all +three occupants of the machine, and then the craft, struck in a vital +spot, staggered. The 'plane began to sink slowly. In vain did Hal try to +check the descent. The machine, still heading slightly toward the north, +glided toward the water below. + +Suddenly Hal made out something below besides water. It was land. The +lad breathed easier, for it was plain, that at the rate at which the +craft was sinking, it could clear the water by a good quarter of a mile, +beyond which the lad could see a sandy coast. + +"It must be the coast of Sweden or Denmark," he said to himself, "in +which event we are safe, for it is neutral ground." + +The Germans, realizing that their foe was sinking, did not waste another +shot on it, but swarmed after. Now the craft was close to the water. +Gently it skimmed over it, across a short stretch of sand, and then +settled slowly to the ground. + +Hal and Chester glanced about. There was no one in sight on the sandy +beach and the Germans were coming right after them. + +"Even though this be Sweden," said Hal, "unless Swedish troops come to +our aid, the Germans are likely to violate the neutrality of the country +and take us anyhow." + +"Not without a fight," declared Alexis. "Let me get my feet on the +ground again, and I will show you such a fight as you never saw. On the +ground I can fight." + +Now the 'plane was but a few scant yards from the earth. It grounded +with a shock. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX. + +THE DEATH OF A TITAN. + + +Quickly the three leaped out. In spite of the Germans hovering overhead, +Hal examined the 'plane. + +"Great Scott!" he exclaimed, after a quick, though careful, inspection. +"I can fix this thing in five minutes." + +Now the German machines came to the ground a short distance away. From +each craft leaped three men, who dashed toward the three friends. + +Alexis turned to Hal and Chester. + +"Do you," he said calmly, "fix up the airship. I will meet these +fellows!" + +Before either lad could reply, he had hurled himself upon the foe. + +For some reason, probably because they did not wish to attract the +attention of the Swedish authorities by the sounds of a struggle, the +Germans, at first, drew no firearms. Perceiving but one form rushing +toward them, they advanced to meet him confidently. Plainly they +considered it the wild dash of a madman. + +Hal and Chester turned their attention to the aeroplane, and while +Alexis fought against overwhelming numbers, they overhauled it +carefully. + +Right into the midst of his foes rushed the giant. Such a superb attack +was never seen before--such a mad wild dash as he took the enemy by +surprise and hurled them back--all of them--back against the airships +that stood on the sands. + +As the huge Cossack rushed forward, his sword flashed above his head. +His revolver he gripped tightly by the barrel. A fighting fire darted +from his eye, and his thin lips were bared in a slight smile. + +If ever a man felt the joy of battle it was he. He heeded not the number +of his adversaries nor the steel that flashed forth against him. +Slashing, cutting, parrying, thrusting, he hurled himself in upon them. +They were carried back by the very fierceness of his attack. They gave +way before him, parting to retreat around one of the aircraft. With one +swift sweep of his foot, Alexis tore a ragged hole in the bottom of the +first craft; and at the same instant two men fell beneath his slashing +blows. + +They could not stand before him--their very numbers were against them as +the giant pressed ever forward. Now a man dropped to the ground and +seized the giant by the left leg, thinking to drag him down. Alexis +drove his right boot into the man's face, and at the same moment, by a +quick back-handed sweep of his sword, cut down a man who would have +sprung upon his back. + +His revolver rose and fell, once, twice, three times, and beneath these +crushing blows more Germans went down. But Alexis did not escape +unscathed. A sword thrust had pierced his chest, not deeply, but the +blood streamed forth. There was a gaping wound in his cheek; his +clothing was pierced in a dozen places. + +But in spite of this he pressed on. He thought only of advance, never of +retreat; and as he hurled his gigantic body, time after time, upon the +overwhelming number of his foes, they gave back in consternation and +astonishment. + +Ten men lay dead upon the ground, their skulls battered by fierce blows +of the revolver, or pierced through and through by the great sword. + +And now Hal and Chester, the aeroplane once more ready for flight, +dashed forward to the rescue with loud cries. + +They ranged themselves alongside the fighting Cossack. He greeted them +with a half-smile; he had no time for more. Three men threw themselves +upon him. One he hurled from him with a stroke of his mighty leg, +another felt the weight of his revolver butt and the third fell back +with a sword wound in his chest. + +Unmindful of his own danger, the giant turned to the aid of Chester, +who, at that moment was at the mercy of an enemy's sword. A mighty +stroke of the massive arm and the German lay dead on the ground. + +The Germans, having had the worst of this encounter with a single foe, +stood back and drew their revolvers. Quickly Alexis reversed his own +weapon and fired. There was one enemy less. A bullet struck him in the +chest. He staggered, but recovered, and again fired at his foes. + +The revolvers of the two lads were also spitting fire. A bullet grazed +Hal's head and he toppled over. He was up in a moment, however, fighting +more fiercely than before. Chester felt a stinging sensation in his +right arm. Quickly he transferred his weapon to his left hand, and it +continued to send out its deadly missiles. + +But this unequal contest could not last. It must be ended. + +Alexis, wounded in a score of places, his giant body hacked and hewn, +hurled himself forward in one last desperate attack. Germans quailed +before the very fury of his face; they tumbled here and there beneath +his sword, or sweeping blows of his now empty revolver. A bullet struck +the giant in the throat. He dropped his revolver and clapped his hand to +the wound. Another struck him in the shoulder. He sprang forward, struck +down another of the enemy, then staggered back. + +And at that moment there came the sound of tramping footsteps on the +sand. Turning quickly Hal and Chester perceived approaching rapidly a +body of Swedish troops. The Germans saw them at the same instant. They +were still a mile away across the sands, but the Germans had no mind to +be caught and interned. Quickly they leaped for their aircraft, all +except those who remained upon the sands, their faces turned upward or +buried therein. + +Hal and Chester each seized Alexis by an arm and dragged him back toward +their own aeroplane, now righted and waiting only the touch that would +send it into the air. The giant Cossack staggered along, but it was +plain to both lads that he was about to collapse. + +"Come, come, Alexis!" cried Hal, trying to urge him on. "Only a few more +steps and we will be all right." + +To the very side of the craft they carried him; but here, shaking +himself free of their detaining hands, he suddenly fell, face forward, +upon the ground. Quickly the two lads bent over him, and succeeded in +turning him on his back. + +His voice came in faint gasps. The boys bent near to catch what he was +saying. + +"Leave me here! You go on!" came his voice. "I am done for! Save +yourselves!" + +The lads waited to hear no more. Chester took him by the feet and Hal by +the head, and with great effort succeeded in placing him within the +aeroplane, stretching him out, as well as they could across two of the +seats. Then Chester sprang in and Hal jumped to the wheel. + +Along the beach the craft skimmed lightly, then arose from the ground. +At the same instant a volley rang out from the approaching Swedish +troops and the officer in command called out to surrender. The German +airships, for some unaccountable reason, had not waited to resume the +fight upon ascending into the air, but had made off. + +Hal headed the aeroplane due westward, making for the coast of England. +Alexis had lapsed into unconsciousness upon being placed in the machine, +but now he stirred feebly and spoke. + +"A real fight, wasn't it?" he gasped. "I told you I could do it if I +were on the ground. How many was it I killed? Twenty--thirty--forty----" + +He broke off and burst into a fit of coughing. Chester bent over him +anxiously. + +"You'll be all right in a day or two, old man," he said gently. + +Alexis smiled feebly. + +"Don't try to fool me," he said. "I am a man. I know when death is near +and I am not afraid to face it." + +Both lads realized that their giant Cossack friend was near his end, but +there was nothing they could do for him. Chester bound up the wounds as +well as he could, stopping the flow of blood, but that was all. + +As the aeroplane flew over the sea toward the coast of England, the +dying man continued to talk. Now he sat up in the craft and gazed down +over the side. + +"I had always thought," he said slowly, "that I should end my days in my +own land. As it is I shall not end them in any land at all; but in the +air. It is strange." + +Hal slowed the aeroplane down until it was barely moving and turned to +Alexis. + +"You are wrong," he said. "You are not going to die. In a few hours we +shall be in England, where you shall have the best of medical +attention." + +"It is too late," replied the Cossack calmly. "I shall not live an +hour." + +His breath came with difficulty. + +"There is one thing I should like to know," he said. + +"What is it, Alexis?" asked Hal. + +"Will you tell me what you meant by 'drawing the long bow'?" + +Hal was silent for some moments, and then replied gravely. + +"When a man boasts of things he has never done, in America it is called +'drawing the long bow.' I was mistaken in your case. It would be +impossible for you to 'draw the long bow.' You have done too much." + +"That is true," agreed Chester. + +Suddenly the giant frame fell back. Hal turned as best he could while +Chester leaned over him anxiously. Alexis extended a hand to each of +them, which they grasped. + +"This," he said, pressing their hands in a still strong grip, "is the +end. I wish that I could have lived to see the outcome of this war." + +"There can be but one outcome," replied Chester softly. "You may rest +assured of that." + +"True," said the giant, "but I would like to have seen my old home +again." + +The lads were silent. Finally Hal spoke. + +"To think," he said, "that we are responsible for your fate; but for us +you would have remained with the army and have lived to the end of the +war. We are to blame." + +"Sh-h-h," whispered the dying giant. The hand which held Chester's freed +itself and groped in his pocket. "But for you lads," he continued, "I +should never have won this." + +He pulled from his pocket the Cross of St. George, pinned to his breast +by the Russian emperor, and gazed at it lovingly. + +"It is well worth the sacrifice," he said. + +Still holding the medal his hand again sought Chester's and pressed it. +His other hand still gripped Hal's. + +"Good-by, boys," he said firmly. "Let the Grand Duke know." + +The pressure upon their hands relaxed. The giant frame of Alexis +Vergoff, brave man and fighter extraordinary, stiffened and lay still. +He was dead. + +And as the aeroplane swept over the sea to the distant coast of England +Hal and Chester mourned the loss of a true and stanch friend. + +Arrived in England the lads saw the body of Alexis laid to rest with +fitting honors, and continued their mission to the continent, where Hal +put the document entrusted to his care by the Russian Grand Duke +Nicholas into the hands of Field Marshal Sir John French, +commander-in-chief of the British forces on the continent. + +And so we shall take leave of them for a short time. Their subsequent +adventures will be found in a succeeding volume, entitled: "The Boy +Allies in the Trenches; or Midst Shot and Shell Along the Aisne." + +THE END. + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Boy Allies with the Cossacks, by Clair W. 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