"Don't be a fool," said he to Simplex, "she's cheating you. Those thongs of fool leather, you'll get them from the farriers for a penny apiece."
"That's all you know about it, Mr. Corporal," cried the witch, gnashing her teeth; "my husband is not a knacker who flays horses, but a headsman who flays men."
Valentine shuddered, and spat on the ground.
"Then if your wares be really genuine, they are doubly loathsome. Be off with you!"
Simplex gave Pirka a nudge with his elbow and pointed at Valentine with a wink, whereupon Pirka looked slyly askance at him, and arching her elbows and s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g up her mouth, said to Valentine:
"Well, well, Mr. Corporal, for all your fine airs you'll be glad enough before long to take something from me which comes through the headsman's hands."
Simplex trod on her foot to make her hold her tongue, and then they began talking together in a low voice, as if they were only haggling about the thongs.
The next moment Pirka had as completely vanished as if the earth had swallowed her up.
When the clock in the townhall tower struck eight, the bells of the Franciscan convent close by began to ring, the roll of drums was heard proceeding from the courtyard, and the sad procession appeared in the market place.
First came the magistrates, who ascended the cloth-laid steps of the dais, on the top of which the town-clerk recited the sentence aloud.
Then came the guards, sword in hand, and between them the three delinquents, each of whom had a cord round his neck, the end of which was held by one of the headsman's apprentices. Last of all came the headsman, the old vihodar himself, on a white horse, dressed in a long red mantle half covering his steed; a black biretta with a red plume covered his head, and he held a naked sword in his right hand. Two of his henchmen led the horse. Behind him marched eight apprentices, who brought with them a whole a.r.s.enal of instruments of torture.
Valentine turned his head aside in order to see nothing of all this.
Had he but looked, he would certainly have recognized _one_ of the headsman's a.s.sistants.
The mob saluted the robbers with a fearful howl, which they answered with hideous curses. But their filthiest imprecations were hurled at the women among the spectators, who were ready to sink into the ground for shame.
All three delinquents bore traces of torture on their bodies. They were covered with burns and sores. Yet they showed no signs of weakness. On the contrary, they greeted the old vihodar with wild laughter, and scornfully challenged him to show them of his skill.
He coolly tossed the scarlet mantle from his shoulders, and in a low voice distributed his commands to the apprentices, who were already a.s.sembled on the scaffold.
The mob set up a frightful yell at the sight of the grim, stalwart graybeard, to which he responded with a mock bow like a stage hero.
He opened the proceedings with Bajus.
Valentine had no need to stop his ears, for Bajus never uttered a sound. Not a sigh escaped him. The people all round whispered to one another in shuddering awe. The robber's cold contempt of death, and the calmness with which he endured all manner of tortures, raised him in their eyes to the rank of a hero.
In the deep stillness which prevailed, nothing was to be heard but the droning of the heavy wheel.
It was all over with Bajus.
The next in order was the haughty Hafran.
With him the b.l.o.o.d.y drama took quite another turn.
The vihodar's a.s.sistants had sufficed for the first robber. He himself had only given his directions in a low voice. But honor constrained him to cope personally with the second robber.
Hafran was a frantic devil. He howled curses at the vihodar and overwhelmed him with insults. He told him to his face that he was a clumsy bungler.
Then the old vihodar took his biretta from his head, doffed his coat, and set about accomplishing his masterpiece.
The spectators had reason to be satisfied with both performers. The old vihodar exhausted all his skill upon the robber, and the robber never ceased hurling defiance at the vihodar. They cursed and reviled each other like devils. The robber laughed at all the torments, and infuriated the vihodar by asking him derisively when he was going to begin. The vihodar was quite beside himself for rage, and excelled himself in the invention of fresh torments. Every time he produced a fresh instrument of torture, he asked the robber how the entertainment pleased him.
The Franciscan monk who was on the scaffold to afford the delinquents the last consolations of religion, tried to pacify them both, and begged them for Heaven's sake to leave off cursing; but neither paid the slightest attention to him. The robber had the last word. Even when he was so mangled and mutilated that he no longer resembled anything human, even then he howled words of scorn in the face of his tormentor. At last they plunged a hook into his side and hoisted him aloft, and even then he showered down insults upon all the women present at the b.l.o.o.d.y spectacle, till at last he gave up his unconquerable spirit, which had surely made some mistake in choosing a simple human body for its earthly dwelling-place.
The old vihodar was ashamed. He felt that this heroic resistance had very considerably impaired his prestige in the opinion of the people. This blot upon his escutcheon must be wiped off.
The third robber chieftain, Janko, still remained. He should serve to restore the honor of the vihodar.
The old vihodar proposed to do great things with him. He had the fetters removed from the feet of the delinquent, and would not even allow him to be bound to the stake.
"We will have a dance together!" said he to Janko.
That word was the death of him.
The next moment, such a yell of horror burst forth from the crowd that even Valentine's curiosity was aroused. He looked toward the scaffold, and what he saw there really was astounding.
Janko, the mighty leaper, the instant his chains were taken from his feet, had sprung upon the vihodar, pressed down his chest with his knees, and bit him in the neck exactly on the spot where the great jugular artery is. This he bit clean through, and--as if to justify the fable, that whomsoever Janko bit with his envenomed fangs was a child of death--the old vihodar fell to the ground like a log of wood, and when the apprentices sprang forward to tear the delinquent away from him, the headsman was already dead.
This incident so revolted Valentine that he reeled, and clinging tightly to Simplex, stammered: "I really believe I am going to faint."
"Hold up a little bit longer!" whispered Simplex in his ear.
As soon as the people learnt that Janko had killed the vihodar with a single bite, a fearful tumult arose.
Everyone began to applaud the delinquent and cry: "Vivat Janko,"
while they pelted the headsman's a.s.sistants with stinking eggs and rotten apples.
At last the blare of trumpets and the roll of kettle-drums drowned the voice of the mob, and the sheriff arose on the dais and declared that despite the unhappy accident which had befallen the old vihodar, the execution of the law's sentence must proceed notwithstanding. The young master, the son of the vihodar, was there, and he was to do his duty, and that at once.
The uproar ceased and the crowd in intense expectation looked toward the scaffold for the new performer to appear. It was plain, from the deep silence that now ensued, that the newcomer had something to say.
Valentine kept his eyes closed. He was deeply agitated. Had he not been in the ranks he would have run away.
And now, in the midst of the general silence, he heard the young master addressing the people:
"This evil-doer who has killed my father is not worthy to be put out of the world by a human hand in a human way."
Valentine listened in amazement. That voice was familiar to his ear.
It seemed to him as if he had once heard it from the pulpit.
But the other proceeded:
"There is a mode of execution used in distant Abyssinia, where the black skins of evil-doers are insensible to ordinary torture. They are sewn alive in fresh buffalo hides and hung in the sun. So soon as the hide begins to dry and shrink, the evil-doers learn to sing a veritable song of h.e.l.l. That is the way in which I mean to execute this delinquent."
"What's that?" cried Valentine, "whose voice is that? Who but one that has attended the lectures of the learned Professor David Frohlich could have heard of this Abyssinian tale? Who is it?"
He looked up and recognized the man in scarlet on the scaffold.
"That is Henry Catsrider, the husband of your Michal!" cried Simplex, looking him full in the face.