opposite the door.
'I
surrender,' cried Curdie.
'Then tie up your brute, and give her here.'
'No, no,' cried Curdie through the door. 'I
surrender; but I'm not
going to do your hangman's work. If you want MY dog, you must take
her.'
'Then we shall set the house on fire, and burn witch and all.'
'It will go hard with us but we shall kill a few dozen of you
first,' cried Curdie. 'We're not the least afraid of you.' With
that Curdie turned to Derba, and said:
'Don't be frightened. I have a strong feeling that all will be
well. Surely no trouble will come to you for being good to
strangers.'
'But the poor dog!' said Derba.
Now Curdie and Lina understood each other more than a little by
this time, and not only had he seen that she understood the
proclamation, but when she looked up at him after it was read, it
was with such a grin, and such a yellow flash, that he saw also she
was determined to take care of herself.
'The dog will probably give you reason to think a little more of
her ere long,' he answered. 'But now,' he went on, 'I fear I must
hurt your house a little. I have great confidence, however, that
I shall be able to make up to you for it one day.'
'Never mind the house, if only you can get safe off,' she answered.
'I don't think they will hurt this precious lamb,' she added,
clasping little Barbara to her bosom. 'For myself, it is all one;
I am ready for anything.'
'it is but a little hole for Lina I want to make,' said Curdie.
'She can creep through a much smaller one than you would think.'
Again he took his mattock, and went to the back wall.
'They won't burn the house,' he said to himself. 'There is too
good a one on each side of it.'
The
tumult had kept increasing every moment, and the city
marshalhad been shouting, but Curdie had not listened to him. When now
they heard the blows of his mattock, there went up a great cry, and
the people taunted the soldiers that they were afraid of a dog and
his miner. The soldiers
therefore made a rush at the door, and cut
its
fastenings.
The moment they opened it, out leaped Lina, with a roar so
unnaturally
horrible that the sword arms of the soldiers dropped by
their sides, paralysed with the
terror of that cry; the crowd fled
in every direction, shrieking and yelling with
mortaldismay; and
without even knocking down with her tail, not to say
biting a man
of them with her pulverizing jaws, Lina vanished - no one knew
whither, for not one of the crowd had had courage to look upon her.
The moment she was gone, Curdie
advanced and gave himself up. The
soldiers were so filled with fear, shame, and
chagrin, that they
were ready to kill him on the spot. But he stood quietly facing
them, with his mattock on his shoulder; and the magistrate wishing
to examine him, and the people to see him made an example of, the
soldiers had to content themselves with
taking him. Partly for
derision,
partly to hurt him, they laid his mattock against his
back, and tied his arms to it.
They led him up a very steep street, and up another still, all the
crowd following. The king's palace-castle rose
towering above
them; but they stopped before they reached it, at a low-browed door
in a great, dull, heavy-looking building.
The city
marshal opened it with a key which hung at his
girdle, and
ordered Curdie to enter. The place within was dark as night, and
while he was feeling his way with his feet, the
marshal gave him a
rough push. He fell, and rolled once or twice over,
unable to help
himself because his hands were tied behind him.
It was the hour of the magistrate's second and more important
breakfast, and until that was over he never found himself capable
of attending to a case with
concentration sufficient to the
distinguishing of the side upon which his own
advantage lay; and
hence was this
respite for Curdie, with time to collect his
thoughts. But indeed he had very few to collect, for all he had to
do, so far as he could see, was to wait for what would come next.
Neither had he much power to collect them, for he was a good deal
shaken.
in a few minutes he discovered, to his great
relief, that, from the
projection of the pick end of his mattock beyond his body, the fall
had loosened the ropes tied round it. He got one hand disengaged,
and then the other; and
presently stood free, with his good mattock
once more in right serviceable relation to his arms and legs.
CHAPTER 16
The Mattock
While The magistrate reinvigorated his
selfishness with a greedy
breakfast, Curdie found doing nothing in the dark rather tiresome
work. it was
useless attempting to think what he should do next,
seeing the circumstances in which he was
presently to find himself
were
altogether unknown to him. So he began to think about his
father and mother in their little
cottage home, high in the clear
air of the open Mountainside, and the thought, instead of making
his
dungeon gloomier by the
contrast, made a light in his soul that
destroyed the power of darkness and captivity.
But he was at length startled from his waking dream by a swell in
the noise outside. All the time there had been a few of the more
idle of the inhabitants about the door, but they had been rather
quiet. Now, however, the sounds of feet and voices began to grow,
and grew so rapidly that it was plain a
multitude was gathering.
For the people of Gwyntystorm always gave themselves an hour of
pleasure after their second breakfast, and what greater pleasure
could they have than to see a stranger abused by the officers of
justice?
The noise grew till it was like the roaring of the sea, and that
roaring went on a long time, for the magistrate, being a great man,
liked to know that he was waited for: it added to the
enjoyment of
his breakfast, and, indeed, enabled him to eat a little more after
he had thought his powers exhausted.
But at length, in the waves of the human noises rose a bigger wave,
and by the
running and shouting and
outcry, Curdie
learned that the
magistrate was approaching.
Presently came the sound of the great rusty key in the lock, which
yielded with groaning
reluctance; the door was thrown back, the
light rushed in, and with it came the voice of the city
marshal,
calling upon Curdie, by many legal epithets opprobrious, to come
forth and be tried for his life,
inasmuch as he had raised a
tumultin His Majesty's city of Gwyntystorm, troubled the hearts of the
king's baker and
barber, and slain the
faithful dogs of His
Majesty's well-beloved butchers.
He was still
reading, and Curdie was still seated in the brown
twilight of the vault, not listening, but pondering with himself
how this king the city
marshal talked of could be the same with the
Majesty he had seen ride away on his grand white horse with the
Princess Irene on a
cushion before him, when a
scream of agonized
terror arose on the
farthest skirt of the crowd, and, swifter than
flood or flame, the
horror spread shrieking. In a moment the air
was filled with
hideous howling, cries of
unspeakabledismay, and
the multitudinous noise of
running feet. The next moment, in at
the door of the vault bounded Lina, her two green eyes flaming
yellow as sunflowers, and
seeming to light up the
dungeon. With
one spring she threw herself at Curdie's feet, and laid her head