<p><SPAN name="chap16"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER XVI. </h3>
<h3> THE PROGRESS OF THE REVOLT. </h3>
<p>Meanwhile the President and his two
followers pursued their way through the
city. Many people were moving about the
streets, and here and there dark figures
gathered in groups. The impression that
great events were impending grew; the very
air was sultry and surcharged with whisperings.
The barricade, which was being built
outside Savrola's house, had convinced
Molara that a rising was imminent; half a mile
from the palace the way was blocked by
another. Three carts had been stopped and
drawn across the street, and about fifty men
were working silently to strengthen the
obstruction: some pulled up the flat
paving-stones; others were carrying mattresses and
boxes filled with earth from the adjacent
houses; but they paid little attention to the
President's party. He turned up his collar
and pressing his felt hat well down on his
face clambered over the barrier,—the
significance of what he saw filling his mind; the
Subaltern indeed in his undress uniform drew
some curious looks, but no attempt was made
to stop his progress. These men waited for
the signal.</p>
<p>All this time Molara said not a word.
With the approach of danger he made great
efforts to regain his calmness, that he might
have a clear head to meet it; but for all his
strength of will, his hatred of Savrola filled
his mind to the exclusion of everything else.
As he reached the palace the revolt broke
out all over the city. Messenger after
messenger hurried up with evil news. Some of
the regiments had refused to fire on the
people; others were fraternising with them;
everywhere barricades grew and the
approaches to the palace were on all sides
being closed. The Revolutionary leaders
had gathered at the Mayoralty. The streets
were placarded with the Proclamation of the
Provisional Government. Officers from
various parts of the town hastened to the palace;
some were wounded, many agitated. Among
them was Sorrento, who brought the terrible
news that an entire battery of artillery had
surrendered their guns to the rebels. By
half-past three it was evident, from the
reports which were received by telegram and
messenger, that the greater part of the city
had passed into the hands of the Revolutionaries
with very little actual fighting.</p>
<p>The President bore all with a calmness
which revealed the full strength of his hard,
stern character. He had, in truth, a terrible
stimulant. Beyond the barricades and the
rebels who lined them was the Mayoralty
and Savrola. The face and figure of his
enemy was before his eyes; everything else
seemed of little importance. Yet he found
in the blinding emergency an outlet for his
fury, a counter-irritant for his grief; to crush
the revolt, but above all to kill Savrola, was
his heart's desire.</p>
<p>"We must wait for daylight," he said.</p>
<p>"And what then, Sir?" asked the War-Minister.</p>
<p>"We will then proceed to the Mayoralty
and arrest the leaders of this disturbance."</p>
<p>The rest of the night was spent in
organising a force with which to move at dawn.
A few hundred faithful soldiers (men who
had served with Molara in the former war),
seventy officers of the regular army, whose
loyalty was unquestionable, and the remaining
battalion of the Guard with a detachment
of armed police, were alone available.
This band of devoted men, under fourteen
hundred in number, collected in the open
space in front of the palace-gates, and
guarded the approaches while they waited
for sunrise.</p>
<p>They were not attacked. "Secure the
city," had been Savrola's order, and the
rebels were busily at work on the barricades,
which in a regular system rose on all sides.
Messages of varied import continued to reach
the President. Louvet, in a hurried note,
expressed his horror at the revolt, and
explained how much he regretted being unable
to join the President at the palace. He had
to leave the city in great haste, he said; a
relative was dangerously ill. He adjured
Molara to trust in Providence; for his part
he was confident that the Revolutionaries
would be suppressed.</p>
<p>The President in his room read this with
a dry, hard laugh. He had never put the
slightest faith in Louvet's courage, having
always realised that in a crisis he would be
useless and a coward. He did not blame
him; the man had his good points, and as a
public official in the Home-Office he was
admirable; but war was not his province.</p>
<p>He passed the letter to Miguel. The
Secretary read it and reflected. He also
was no soldier. It was evident that the game
was up, and there was no need for him to
throw his life away, merely out of sentiment
as he said to himself. He thought of the
part he had played in the drama of the night.
That surely gave him some claims; it would
be possible at least to hedge. He took a
fresh piece of paper and began to write.
Molara paced the room. "What are you
writing?" he asked.</p>
<p>"An order to the Commandant of the
harbour-forts," replied Miguel promptly, "to
acquaint him with the situation and tell
him to hold his posts in your name at all hazards."</p>
<p>"It is needless," said Molara; "either his
men are traitors or they are not."</p>
<p>"I have told him," said Miguel quickly,
"to make a demonstration towards the
palace at dawn, if he can trust his men. It
will create a diversion."</p>
<p>"Very well," said Molara wearily; "but I
doubt it ever reaching him, and he has so
few men that could be spared after the forts
are held adequately."</p>
<p>An orderly entered with a telegram. The
clerk at the office, a loyalist, an unknown
man of honour, had brought it himself,
passing the line of barricades with
extraordinary good-fortune and courage. While
the President tore the envelope open, Miguel
rose and left the room. Outside in the
brilliantly lighted passage he found a
servant, terrified but not incapable. He spoke
to the man quickly and in a low voice;
<i>twenty pounds, the Mayoralty, at all costs</i>,
were the essentials of his instructions. Then
he re-entered the office.</p>
<p>"Look here," said Molara; "it is not all
over yet." The telegram was from Brienz,
near Lorenzo: <i>Clear the line. Strelitz and
force two thousand rebels advanced on the
Black Gorge this afternoon. I have repulsed
them with heavy loss. Strelitz is prisoner.
Am pursuing remainder. I await instructions
at Turga</i>. "This must be published
at once," he said. "Get a thousand copies
printed, and have them circulated among the
loyalists and as far as possible in the city."</p>
<p>The news of the victory was received with
cheers by the troops gathered in the palace-square,
and they waited with impatience for
morning. At length the light of day began
to grow in the sky, and other lights, the glow
of distant conflagrations, paled. The President,
followed by Sorrento, a few officers of
high rank, and his aide-de-camp Tiro,
descended the steps, traversed the courtyard
and passing through the great gates of the
palace, entered the square where the last
reserves of his power were assembled. He
walked about and shook hands right and left
with these faithful friends and supporters.
Presently his eye caught sight of the rebel
proclamation which some daring hand had
placed on the wall under cover of the
darkness. He walked up and read it by the light
of a lantern. Savrola's style was not easy to
mistake. The short crisp sentences of the
appeal to the people to take up arms rang
like a trumpet-call. Across the placard a
small red slip, such as are used on theatrical
advertisements to show the time of the
performance, had been posted at a later hour.
It purported to be the <i>facsimile</i> of a
telegram and ran thus: <i>Forced Black Gorge this
morning. Dictator's troops in full retreat.
Am marching on Lorenzo. Strelitz.</i></p>
<p>Molara quivered with fury. Savrola did
not neglect details, and threw few chances
away. "Infamous liar!" was the President's
comment; but he realised the power of the
man he sought to crush, and for a moment
despair welled in his heart and seemed to
chill his veins. He shook the sensation off
with a great effort.</p>
<p>The officers were already in possession of
the details of the plan, whose boldness was
its main recommendation. The rebels had
succeeded in launching their enterprise; the
Government would reply by a <i>coup d'état</i>. In
any case the stroke was aimed at the heart
of the revolt, and if it went home the results
would be decisive. "The octopus of Rebellion,
Gentlemen," said the President to those
around him, and pointing to the Revolutionary
proclamation, "has long arms. It will
be necessary to cut off his head." And
though all felt the venture to be desperate,
they were brave men and knew their minds.</p>
<p>The distance from the palace to the
Mayoralty was nearly a mile and a half along a
broad but winding avenue; by this avenue,
and by the narrower streets on either side,
the force advanced silently in three divisions.
The President marched on foot with the
centre column; Sorrento took command of
the left, which was the threatened flank.
Slowly, and with frequent halts to keep up
communication with each other, the troops
marched along the silent streets. Not a soul
was to be seen: all the shutters of the houses
were closed, all the doors fastened; and
though the sky grew gradually brighter in
the East, the city was still plunged in gloom.
The advanced files pressed forward up the
avenue, running from tree to tree, and
pausing cautiously at each to peer through the
darkness. Suddenly as they rounded a
bend, a shot rang out in front. "Forward!"
cried the President. The bugles sounded
the charge and the drums beat. In the dim
light the outline of a barricade was visible
two hundred yards off, a dark obstruction
across the roadway. The soldiers shouted
and broke into a run. The defenders of the
barricade, surprised, opened an ineffective
fire and then, seeing that the attack was in
earnest and doubtful of its strength, beat a
retreat while time remained. The barricade
was captured in a moment, and the assailants
pressed on elated by success. Behind the
barricade was a cross street, right and left.
Firing broke out everywhere, and the loud
noise of the rifles echoed from the walls of
the houses. The flanking columns had been
sharply checked at their barricades, but the
capture of the centre position turned both
of these, and their defenders, fearing to be
cut off, fled in disorder.</p>
<p>It was now daylight, and the scene in the
streets was a strange one. The skirmishers
darted between the trees, and the little
blue-white puffs of smoke spotted the whole
picture. The retiring rebels left their wounded
on the ground, and these the soldiers
bayoneted savagely. Shots were fired from the
windows of the houses and from any shelter
that offered,—a lamp-post, a pillar-box, a
wounded man, an overturned cab. The rifle-fire
was searching, and the streets were very
bare. In their desire to get cover, to get
behind something, both sides broke into the
houses and dragged out chairs, tables, and
piles of bedding; and though these were but
little protection from the bullets, men felt
less naked behind them.</p>
<p>All this time the troops were steadily
advancing, though suffering continual loss;
but gradually the fire of the rebels grew
hotter. More men were hurried to the scene
each moment; the pressure on the flanks
became severe; the enveloping enemy pressed
in down the side streets, to hold which the
scanty force at the President's disposal had
to be further weakened. At length the
rebels ceased to retreat; they had reached
their guns, four of which were arranged in a
row across the avenue.</p>
<p>The Mayoralty was now but a quarter of a
mile away, and Molara called on his soldiers
for a supreme effort. A dashing attempt to
carry the guns with the bayonet was defeated
with a loss of thirty killed and wounded, and
the Government troops took shelter in a side
street at right angles to the main avenue.
This in turn was enfiladed by the enemy,
who swept round the columns and began to
cut in on their line of retreat.</p>
<p>Firing was now general along a wide
half-circle. In the hope of driving the
improvised artillery-men from their places, the
troops forced their way into the houses on
either side of the avenue, and climbing along
the roofs began to fire down on their
adversaries. But the rebels, repeating the
manoeuvre, met them and the attempt dwindled
into desperate but purposeless fighting
among the chimney-pots and the skylights.</p>
<p>The President exposed himself manfully.
Moving from one part of the force to
another, he animated his followers by his
example. Tiro, who kept close to him, had
seen enough war to realise that the check
was fatal to their chances. Every moment
was precious; time was slipping away, and
the little force was already almost completely
encircled. He had taken a rifle and was
assisting to burst in the door of a house,
when to his astonishment he saw Miguel.
The Secretary was armed. He had hitherto
remained carefully in the rear, and had
avoided the danger in the air by hiding
behind the trees of the avenue; but now he
advanced boldly to the doorway and began
to help in battering it down. No sooner
was this done than he darted in and ran up
the stairs crying out, "We are all soldiers
to-day!" Several infantrymen followed him
to fire from the lowest windows, but Tiro
could not leave the President; he felt,
however, surprised and pleased by Miguel's
gallantry.</p>
<p>It soon became evident to all that the
attempt had failed. The numbers against
them were too great. A third of the force
had been killed or wounded, when the order
to cut their way back to the palace was
given. On all sides the exulting enemy
pressed fiercely. Isolated parties of soldiers,
cut off from the retiring column, defended
themselves desperately in the houses and
on the roofs. They were nearly all killed
eventually, for everyone's blood was up, and
it was a waste of time to ask for quarter.
Others set fire to the houses and tried to
escape under cover of the smoke; but very
few succeeded. Others again, and among
them Miguel, lay hid in closets and cellars,
from which they emerged when men's
tempers were again human and <i>surrender</i> was
not an unknown word. The right column,
which consisted of five companies of the
Guard battalion, were completely surrounded,
and laid down their arms on the promise of
a rebel general that their lives should be
spared. The promise was kept, and it
appeared that the superior officers among the
Revolutionists were making great efforts to
restrain the fury of their followers.</p>
<p>The main body of the Government troops,
massed in a single column, struggled on
towards the palace losing men at every step.
But in spite of their losses, they were
dangerous people to stop. One party of rebels,
who intercepted their line of retreat, was
swept away in a savage charge, and some
attempt was made to reform; but the
rifle-fire was pitiless and incessant, and
eventually the retreat became a rout. A bloody
pursuit followed in which only some eighty
men escaped capture or death, and with the
President and Sorrento regained the palace
alive. The great gates were closed, and the
slender garrison prepared to defend
themselves to the last.</p>
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