<h2><SPAN name="page119"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE INTERLOPERS</h2>
<p>In a forest of mixed growth somewhere on the eastern spurs of
the Karpathians, a man stood one winter night watching and
listening, as though he waited for some beast of the woods to
come within the range of his vision, and, later, of his
rifle. But the game for whose presence he kept so keen an
outlook was none that figured in the sportsman’s calendar
as lawful and proper for the chase; Ulrich von Gradwitz patrolled
the dark forest in quest of a human enemy.</p>
<p>The forest lands of Gradwitz were of wide extent and well
stocked with game; the narrow strip of precipitous woodland that
lay on its outskirt was not remarkable for the game it harboured
or the shooting it afforded, but it was the most jealously
guarded of all its owner’s territorial possessions. A
famous law suit, in the days of his grandfather, had wrested it
from the illegal possession of a neighbouring family of petty
landowners; the dispossessed party had never acquiesced in the
judgment of the Courts, and a long series of poaching affrays and
similar scandals had embittered the relationships between the
families for three generations. The neighbour feud had
grown into a personal one since Ulrich had come to be head of his
family; if there was a man in the world whom he detested and
wished ill to it was Georg Znaeym, the inheritor of the quarrel
and the tireless game-snatcher and raider of the disputed
border-forest. The feud might, perhaps, have died down or
been compromised if the personal ill-will of the two men had not
stood in the way; as boys they had thirsted for one
another’s blood, as men each prayed that misfortune might
fall on the other, and this wind-scourged winter night Ulrich had
banded together his foresters to watch the dark forest, not in
quest of four-footed quarry, but to keep a look-out for the
prowling thieves whom he suspected of being afoot from across the
land boundary. The roebuck, which usually kept in the
sheltered hollows during a storm-wind, were running like driven
things to-night, and there was movement and unrest among the
creatures that were wont to sleep through the dark hours.
Assuredly there was a disturbing element in the forest, and
Ulrich could guess the quarter from whence it came.</p>
<p>He strayed away by himself from the watchers whom he had
placed in ambush on the crest of the hill, and wandered far down
the steep slopes amid the wild tangle of undergrowth, peering
through the tree trunks and listening through the whistling and
skirling of the wind and the restless beating of the branches for
sight and sound of the marauders. If only on this wild
night, in this dark, lone spot, he might come across Georg
Znaeym, man to man, with none to witness—that was the wish
that was uppermost in his thoughts. And as he stepped round
the trunk of a huge beech he came face to face with the man he
sought.</p>
<p>The two enemies stood glaring at one another for a long silent
moment. Each had a rifle in his hand, each had hate in his
heart and murder uppermost in his mind. The chance had come
to give full play to the passions of a lifetime. But a man
who has been brought up under the code of a restraining
civilisation cannot easily nerve himself to shoot down his
neighbour in cold blood and without word spoken, except for an
offence against his hearth and honour. And before the
moment of hesitation had given way to action a deed of
Nature’s own violence overwhelmed them both. A fierce
shriek of the storm had been answered by a splitting crash over
their heads, and ere they could leap aside a mass of falling
beech tree had thundered down on them. Ulrich von Gradwitz
found himself stretched on the ground, one arm numb beneath him
and the other held almost as helplessly in a tight tangle of
forked branches, while both legs were pinned beneath the fallen
mass. His heavy shooting-boots had saved his feet from
being crushed to pieces, but if his fractures were not as serious
as they might have been, at least it was evident that he could
not move from his present position till some one came to release
him. The descending twig had slashed the skin of his face,
and he had to wink away some drops of blood from his eyelashes
before he could take in a general view of the disaster. At
his side, so near that under ordinary circumstances he could
almost have touched him, lay Georg Znaeym, alive and struggling,
but obviously as helplessly pinioned down as himself. All
round them lay a thick-strewn wreckage of splintered branches and
broken twigs.</p>
<p>Relief at being alive and exasperation at his captive plight
brought a strange medley of pious thank-offerings and sharp
curses to Ulrich’s lips. Georg, who was nearly
blinded with the blood which trickled across his eyes, stopped
his struggling for a moment to listen, and then gave a short,
snarling laugh.</p>
<p>“So you’re not killed, as you ought to be, but
you’re caught, anyway,” he cried; “caught
fast. Ho, what a jest, Ulrich von Gradwitz snared in his
stolen forest. There’s real justice for
you!”</p>
<p>And he laughed again, mockingly and savagely.</p>
<p>“I’m caught in my own forest-land,” retorted
Ulrich. “When my men come to release us you will
wish, perhaps, that you were in a better plight than caught
poaching on a neighbour’s land, shame on you.”</p>
<p>Georg was silent for a moment; then he answered quietly:</p>
<p>“Are you sure that your men will find much to
release? I have men, too, in the forest to-night, close
behind me, and <i>they</i> will be here first and do the
releasing. When they drag me out from under these damned
branches it won’t need much clumsiness on their part to
roll this mass of trunk right over on the top of you. Your
men will find you dead under a fallen beech tree. For
form’s sake I shall send my condolences to your
family.”</p>
<p>“It is a useful hint,” said Ulrich fiercely.
“My men had orders to follow in ten minutes time, seven of
which must have gone by already, and when they get me out—I
will remember the hint. Only as you will have met your
death poaching on my lands I don’t think I can decently
send any message of condolence to your family.”</p>
<p>“Good,” snarled Georg, “good. We fight
this quarrel out to the death, you and I and our foresters, with
no cursed interlopers to come between us. Death and
damnation to you, Ulrich von Gradwitz.”</p>
<p>“The same to you, Georg Znaeym, forest-thief,
game-snatcher.”</p>
<p>Both men spoke with the bitterness of possible defeat before
them, for each knew that it might be long before his men would
seek him out or find him; it was a bare matter of chance which
party would arrive first on the scene.</p>
<p>Both had now given up the useless struggle to free themselves
from the mass of wood that held them down; Ulrich limited his
endeavours to an effort to bring his one partially free arm near
enough to his outer coat-pocket to draw out his wine-flask.
Even when he had accomplished that operation it was long before
he could manage the unscrewing of the stopper or get any of the
liquid down his throat. But what a Heaven-sent draught it
seemed! It was an open winter, and little snow had fallen
as yet, hence the captives suffered less from the cold than might
have been the case at that season of the year; nevertheless, the
wine was warming and reviving to the wounded man, and he looked
across with something like a throb of pity to where his enemy
lay, just keeping the groans of pain and weariness from crossing
his lips.</p>
<p>“Could you reach this flask if I threw it over to
you?” asked Ulrich suddenly; “there is good wine in
it, and one may as well be as comfortable as one can. Let
us drink, even if to-night one of us dies.”</p>
<p>“No, I can scarcely see anything; there is so much blood
caked round my eyes,” said Georg, “and in any case I
don’t drink wine with an enemy.”</p>
<p>Ulrich was silent for a few minutes, and lay listening to the
weary screeching of the wind. An idea was slowly forming
and growing in his brain, an idea that gained strength every time
that he looked across at the man who was fighting so grimly
against pain and exhaustion. In the pain and languor that
Ulrich himself was feeling the old fierce hatred seemed to be
dying down.</p>
<p>“Neighbour,” he said presently, “do as you
please if your men come first. It was a fair compact.
But as for me, I’ve changed my mind. If my men are
the first to come you shall be the first to be helped, as though
you were my guest. We have quarrelled like devils all our
lives over this stupid strip of forest, where the trees
can’t even stand upright in a breath of wind. Lying
here to-night thinking I’ve come to think we’ve been
rather fools; there are better things in life than getting the
better of a boundary dispute. Neighbour, if you will help
me to bury the old quarrel I—I will ask you to be my
friend.”</p>
<p>Georg Znaeym was silent for so long that Ulrich thought,
perhaps, he had fainted with the pain of his injuries. Then
he spoke slowly and in jerks.</p>
<p>“How the whole region would stare and gabble if we rode
into the market-square together. No one living can remember
seeing a Znaeym and a von Gradwitz talking to one another in
friendship. And what peace there would be among the
forester folk if we ended our feud to-night. And if we
choose to make peace among our people there is none other to
interfere, no interlopers from outside . . . You would come and
keep the Sylvester night beneath my roof, and I would come and
feast on some high day at your castle . . . I would never fire a
shot on your land, save when you invited me as a guest; and you
should come and shoot with me down in the marshes where the
wildfowl are. In all the countryside there are none that
could hinder if we willed to make peace. I never thought to
have wanted to do other than hate you all my life, but I think I
have changed my mind about things too, this last half-hour.
And you offered me your wine-flask . . . Ulrich von
Gradwitz, I will be your friend.”</p>
<p>For a space both men were silent, turning over in their minds
the wonderful changes that this dramatic reconciliation would
bring about. In the cold, gloomy forest, with the wind
tearing in fitful gusts through the naked branches and whistling
round the tree-trunks, they lay and waited for the help that
would now bring release and succour to both parties. And
each prayed a private prayer that his men might be the first to
arrive, so that he might be the first to show honourable
attention to the enemy that had become a friend.</p>
<p>Presently, as the wind dropped for a moment, Ulrich broke
silence.</p>
<p>“Let’s shout for help,” he said; he said;
“in this lull our voices may carry a little way.”</p>
<p>“They won’t carry far through the trees and
undergrowth,” said Georg, “but we can try.
Together, then.”</p>
<p>The two raised their voices in a prolonged hunting call.</p>
<p>“Together again,” said Ulrich a few minutes later,
after listening in vain for an answering halloo.</p>
<p>“I heard nothing but the pestilential wind,” said
Georg hoarsely.</p>
<p>There was silence again for some minutes, and then Ulrich gave
a joyful cry.</p>
<p>“I can see figures coming through the wood. They
are following in the way I came down the hillside.”</p>
<p>Both men raised their voices in as loud a shout as they could
muster.</p>
<p>“They hear us! They’ve stopped. Now
they see us. They’re running down the hill towards
us,” cried Ulrich.</p>
<p>“How many of them are there?” asked Georg.</p>
<p>“I can’t see distinctly,” said Ulrich;
“nine or ten,”</p>
<p>“Then they are yours,” said Georg; “I had
only seven out with me.”</p>
<p>“They are making all the speed they can, brave
lads,” said Ulrich gladly.</p>
<p>“Are they your men?” asked Georg. “Are
they your men?” he repeated impatiently as Ulrich did not
answer.</p>
<p>“No,” said Ulrich with a laugh, the idiotic
chattering laugh of a man unstrung with hideous fear.</p>
<p>“Who are they?” asked Georg quickly, straining his
eyes to see what the other would gladly not have seen.</p>
<p>“<i>Wolves</i>.”</p>
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