CHAPTER XCIII.
LENOIR'S FLIGHT--MURRAY THE TRAITOR--HIS PUNISHMENT AND FLIGHT--A LONGRUN--THE AUBERGE--A STRANGE DISAPPEARANCE.
There was a pause.
Pierre Lenoir looked like mischief.
His position was desperate, and they judged, and rightly judged, thathe was a man not likely to stick at a trifle.
The men looked at their officer, and the latter, a man of intelligenceand prudence, albeit no coward, reflected seriously.
Several terrible calamities, accidental and intentional, had of lateopened the eyes of the public to the destructive properties ofdynamite, and to that his thoughts flew.
He wavered.
The coiner saw his chance, and quick to act as to think, he made forthe exit.
"Stand back!" he cried, fiercely, to the men who made a faint show ofbarring his passage. "I'll finish you all off at a stroke if youattempt to oppose me?"
They fell back alarmed.
Lenoir darted on through the inner vault, and so on until he gained theflight of steps.
Reaching the top, he darted through the cottage, and reaching the open,suddenly found himself in the midst of about a dozen men.
The first person upon whom his glance rested, was the doubly-dyedtraitor who had betrayed him solely to serve his own ends, byentrapping Jack Harkaway--the Englishman, who must have been recognizedby the reader, in spite of his assumed name, as Herbert Murray.
Instinctively Lenoir divined that his betrayer was the youngEnglishman.
No sooner did this conclusion force itself upon him than all thought ofpersonal danger vanished from his mind, and he was possessed by onesole idea, one single desire. Revenge!
He lost sight of the peril in which he ran, but with a cry like theroar of a wounded lion he sprang upon the traitor.
A brawny, powerful fellow was Pierre Lenoir, and Herbert Murray was buta puny thing in his grasp.
"Hands off!" exclaimed Murray, in desperation.
Lenoir growled, but said nothing, as he shook him much as a terrierdoes a rat.
Before the police could interfere in the spy's behalf, Lenoir held himwith one hand at arm's length, while with the other he prepared todeliver a fearful blow.
The energy of despair seized on the hapless traitor, and wrenchinghimself free from the coiner's grasp, he fled.
Pierre Lenoir stood staring about him a second.
Then he made after him.
Away went pursuer and pursued.
The terror-stricken Murray got over the ground like a hare, andalthough the coiner was fleet of foot, he was at first distanced in therace.
It became a desperate race between them.
Lenoir tore on.
He would have his betrayer now or perish.
But before he had got more than two hundred yards the pace began totell upon him.
He felt that he would have to give in.
"I must go easier, or I shall fail altogether."
So reasoning, he slackened his pace, and dropped into that slingingtrot that runners in France know as the _pas gymnastique_.
If your strength and wind are of average quality, you can keep up for aprodigious time at that.
Murray flew on, anxious to get away from his furious pursuer.
He increased his lead.
But presently the pace told upon him likewise.
He collected his thoughts and his prudence as he went, and rested.
Glancing over his shoulder, he saw Lenoir come bounding along, aconsiderable distance in the rear.
"Savage beast!" thought Murray. "He means mischief."
Murray meant tiring him out.
This, however, was not so easily done.
The Englishman was a capital runner, and had been one of the crack menof his school-club.
But his _forte_ was pace.
The Frenchman, on the contrary, was a stayer.
It looked bad for Murray.
On they went, and when a good mile had been covered, Murray, onglancing back, felt convinced that it was only a question of time.
He must tire out the Frenchman in the end, he thought.
He believed that an Englishman must always be more than a match for aFrenchman at any kind of athletics.
He reckoned without his host, for while he (Murray) was getting blown,Lenoir swung on at _pas gymnastique_, having got his second wind, andbeing, to all appearance, capable of keeping on for any length of time.
"I shall have to give it up," gasped Murray, when, at the end of thesecond mile, he looked over his shoulder again.
An unpleasant fact revealed itself.
While he was faltering, the Frenchman was rather improving his pace.
Yes.
The distance between them was lessening.
And now he could hear Lenoir's menaces quite plainly as the coinergained upon him.
"I shall have you directly, and I shall beat your skull in!" theFrenchman said.
Murray's craven heart leapt to his mouth.
Already he felt as if his cranium was cracked by the brutal fist of thesavage coiner.
Fear lent him wings.
He put on a spurt.
"Oh, if I had but a pistol," thought Murray; "what a fool I was to comeunarmed on such a job as this."
He partially flagged again.
The distance between them was still decreasing.
This he felt was the beginning of the end, but just as he was thinkingthat there was nothing for it but to turn and make the best fight forit he could, he sighted a roadside inn--a rural auberge.
And for this he flew with renewed energy.
Dashing into the house, he pushed to the door and startled theaubergiste by gasping out in the best French he could command--
"_Un assassin me poursuit. Cachez-moi, ou donnez-moi de quoi medefendre!_"[3]
[3] "I am pursued by an assassin. Hide me, or give me something to defend myself with."
The landlord took Murray--and not unnaturally--for a madman.
He did not like the society of madmen.
To give a weapon to a furious maniac was out of all question.
And the landlord had nothing handy of a more deadly nature than a knifeand fork.
Moreover, he would not have cared to place a dangerous weapon in amadman's hands.
So he met the case by humouring the fugitive with a proposal to go upstairs.
Murray wanted no second invitation.
Up he flew, and locked himself in one of the upper rooms just as Lenoirhammered at the door below.
"_Ou est-il?_"[4] demanded the coiner, fiercely.
[4] "Where is he?"
"_Qui?_"[5]
[5] "Who?"
"_Ne cherchez pas a me tricher_," thundered Lenoir. "_Il m'appartient.Ou est-il, je vous le demande?_"[6]
[6] "Seek not to deceive me," thundered Lenoir. "He belongs to me. Where is he, I ask you again?"
The coiner's manner made the aubergiste uneasy, and thoughtful for hisown safety.
So he pointed up stairs.
Up went Lenoir, and finding a room door locked, he flung his wholeweight against the door and sent it in.
This was the room which the fugitive had entered.
But where was Murray?
Gone!
Vanished!
But where?
Jack Harkaway's Boy Tinker Among The Turks Page 35