<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXVII.</h2>
<p class="h2">MORE VENGEANCE.</p>
<ANTIMG class="dropimg" src="images/drop_a.jpg" alt="A" />
<p class="noin"><span style="font-weight:bold">S</span>
soon as they were gone, Curdie brought
the creatures back to the servants' hall,
and told them to eat up everything on
the table. It <i>was</i> a sight to see them all
standing round it—except such as had to get upon it—eating
and drinking, each after its fashion, without a
smile, or a word, or a glance of fellowship in the act.
A very few moments served to make everything eatable
vanish, and then Curdie requested them to clean the
house, and the page who stood by to assist them.</p>
<p>Every one set about it except Ballbody: he could do
nothing at cleaning, for the more he rolled, the more he
spread the dirt. Curdie was curious to know what he
had been, and how he had come to be such as he was;
but he could only conjecture that he was a gluttonous
alderman whom nature had treated homeopathically.</p>
<p>And now there was such a cleaning and clearing out
of neglected places, such a burying and burning of refuse,
such a rinsing of jugs, such a swilling of sinks, and such
a flushing of drains, as would have delighted the eyes of
all true housekeepers and lovers of cleanliness generally.</p>
<p>Curdie meantime was with the king, telling him all he
had done. They had heard a little noise, but not much,
for he had told the avengers to repress outcry as much as
possible; and they had seen to it that the more any one
cried out the more he had to cry out upon, while the
patient ones they scarcely hurt at all.</p>
<p>Having promised his majesty and her royal highness a
good breakfast, Curdie now went to finish the business.
The courtiers must be dealt with. A few who were the
worst, and the leaders of the rest, must be made examples
of; the others should be driven from their beds to
the street.</p>
<p>He found the chiefs of the conspiracy holding a final
consultation in the smaller room off the hall. These
were the lord chamberlain, the attorney-general, the
master of the horse, and the king's private secretary: the
lord chancellor and the rest, as foolish as faithless,
were but the tools of these.</p>
<p>The housemaid had shown him a little closet, opening
from a passage behind, where he could overhear all that
passed in that room; and now Curdie heard enough to
understand that they had determined, in the dead of that
night, rather in the deepest dark before the morning, to
bring a certain company of soldiers into the palace, make
away with the king, secure the princess, announce the
sudden death of his majesty, read as his the will they had
drawn up, and proceed to govern the country at their
ease, and with results: they would at once levy severer
taxes, and pick a quarrel with the most powerful of their
neighbours. Everything settled, they agreed to retire,
and have a few hours' quiet sleep first—all but the secretary,
who was to sit up and call them at the proper
moment. Curdie stole away, allowed them half an hour
to get to bed, and then set about completing his purgation
of the palace.</p>
<p>First he called Lina, and opened the door of the room
where the secretary sat. She crept in, and laid herself
down against it. When the secretary, rising to stretch
his legs, caught sight of her eyes, he stood frozen with
terror. She made neither motion nor sound. Gathering
courage, and taking the thing for a spectral illusion,
he made a step forward. She showed her other teeth,
with a growl neither more than audible nor less than
horrible. The secretary sank fainting into a chair. He
was not a brave man, and besides, his conscience had gone
over to the enemy, and was sitting against the door by
Lina.</p>
<p>To the lord chamberlain's door next, Curdie conducted
the legserpent, and let him in.</p>
<p>Now his lordship had had a bedstead made for himself,
sweetly fashioned of rods of silver gilt: upon it the
legserpent found him asleep, and under it he crept. But
out he came on the other side, and crept over it next, and
again under it, and so over it, under it, over it, five or six
times, every time leaving a coil of himself behind him, until
he had softly folded all his length about the lord chamberlain
and his bed. This done, he set up his head, looking
down with curved neck right over his lordship's, and
began to hiss in his face. He woke in terror unspeakable,
and would have started up; but the moment he
moved, the legserpent drew his coils closer, and closer
still, and drew and drew until the quaking traitor heard
the joints of his bedstead grinding and gnarring. Presently
he persuaded himself that it was only a horrid
nightmare, and began to struggle with all his strength to
throw it off. Thereupon the legserpent gave his hooked
nose such a bite, that his teeth met through it—but it
was hardly thicker than the bowl of a spoon; and then
the vulture knew that he was in the grasp of his enemy
the snake, and yielded. As soon as he was quiet the
legserpent began to untwist and retwist, to uncoil and
recoil himself, swinging and swaying, knotting and
relaxing himself with strangest curves and convolutions,
always, however, leaving at least one coil around his
victim. At last he undid himself entirely, and crept
from the bed. Then first the lord chamberlain discovered
that his tormentor had bent and twisted the bedstead,
legs and canopy and all, so about him, that he
was shut in a silver cage out of which it was impossible
for him to find a way. Once more, thinking his enemy
was gone, he began to shout for help. But the instant he
opened his mouth his keeper darted at him and bit him, and
after three or four such essays, with like result, he lay still.</p>
<p>The master of the horse Curdie gave in charge to the
tapir. When the soldier saw him enter—for he was not
yet asleep—he sprang from his bed, and flew at him with
his sword. But the creature's hide was invulnerable to
his blows, and he pecked at his legs with his proboscis
until he jumped into bed again, groaning, and covered
himself up; after which the tapir contented himself with
now and then paying a visit to his toes.</p>
<p>For the attorney-general, Curdie led to his door a huge
spider, about two feet long in the body, which, having
made an excellent supper, was full of webbing. The
attorney-general had not gone to bed, but sat in a chair
asleep before a great mirror. He had been trying the
effect of a diamond star which he had that morning taken
from the jewel-room. When he woke he fancied himself
paralysed; every limb, every finger even, was motionless:
coils and coils of broad spider-ribbon bandaged his members
to his body, and all to the chair. In the glass he
saw himself wound about, under and over and around,
with slavery infinite. On a footstool a yard off sat the
spider glaring at him.</p>
<p>Clubhead had mounted guard over the butler, where
he lay tied hand and foot under the third cask. From
that cask he had seen the wine run into a great bath, and
therein he expected to be drowned. The doctor, with
his crushed leg, needed no one to guard him.</p>
<p>And now Curdie proceeded to the expulsion of the
rest. Great men or underlings, he treated them all
alike. From room to room over the house he went, and
sleeping or waking took the man by the hand. Such was
the state to which a year of wicked rule had reduced the
moral condition of the court, that in it all he found but
three with human hands. The possessors of these he
allowed to dress themselves and depart in peace. When
they perceived his mission, and how he was backed, they
yielded without dispute.</p>
<p>Then commenced a general hunt, to clear the house of
the vermin. Out of their beds in their night-clothing,
out of their rooms, gorgeous chambers or garret nooks, the
creatures hunted them. Not one was allowed to escape.
Tumult and noise there was little, for the fear was
too deadly for outcry. Ferreting them out everywhere,
following them upstairs and downstairs, yielding no instant
of repose except upon the way out, the avengers persecuted
the miscreants, until the last of them was shivering
outside the palace gates, with hardly sense enough left to
know where to turn.</p>
<p>When they set out to look for shelter, they found every
inn full of the servants expelled before them, and not one
would yield his place to a superior suddenly levelled with
himself. Most houses refused to admit them on the
ground of the wickedness that must have drawn on
them such a punishment; and not a few would have been
left in the streets all night, had not Derba, roused by the
vain entreaties at the doors on each side of her cottage,
opened hers, and given up everything to them. The
lord chancellor was only too glad to share a mattress
with a stable-boy, and steal his bare feet under his
jacket.</p>
<p>In the morning Curdie appeared, and the outcasts were
in terror, thinking he had come after them again. But
he took no notice of them: his object was to request
Derba to go to the palace: the king required her services.
She needed take no trouble about her cottage, he said;
the palace was henceforward her home: she was the
king's chastelaine over men and maidens of his household.
And this very morning she must cook his majesty
a nice breakfast.</p>
<hr class="chapter" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />