The Dark Star - Page 229/255

The interior of the entire house was now in an uproar; shots came fast

from every landing; the semi-dusk of stair-well and corridor was

lighted by incessant pistol flashes and the whole building echoed the

deafening racket.

"What do you make of it?" shouted Sengoun furiously, standing like a

baited and perplexed bull. "Who's fighting who in this fool of a

place? By Erlik! I'd like to know whom I'm to fire at!"

Ilse Dumont, creeping along the wall, looked fearfully down at

Weishelm who no longer moved where he lay on the dusty floor, with

eyes and mouth open and his distorted face already half covered by a

wet and crawling scarlet mask.

"Brandes and Stull are betraying us," she whispered. "They are killing

my comrades--on the stairs down there----"

"If that is true," called out Neeland in a low, cautious voice, "you'd

better wait a moment, Sengoun!"

But Sengoun's rage for combat had already filled him to overflowing,

and the last rag of patience left him.

"I don't care who is fighting!" he bellowed. "It's all one to me! Now

is the time to shoot our way out of this. Come on, Neeland! Hurrah for

the Terek Cossacks! Another town taken! Hurrah!"

Neeland caught Ilse by the wrist: "You'd better get free of this house while you can!" he said, dragging

her with him after Sengoun, who had already reached the head of the

stairs and was starting down, peering about for a target.

Suddenly, on the landing below, Golden Beard and Ali Baba appeared,

caught sight of Sengoun and Neeland above, and opened fire on them

instantly, driving them back from the head of the staircase flat

against the corridor wall. But Golden Beard, seeming to realise now

that the garret landing was held and the way to the roof cut off,

began to retreat from the foot of the garret stairs with Ali Baba

following, their restless, upward-pointed pistols searching for the

slightest movement in the semi-obscurity of the hallway above.

Sengoun, fuming and fretting, had begun to creep toward the head of

the stairs again, when there came a rattling hail of shots from below,

a rush, the trample of feet, the crash of furniture and startling slam

of a door.

Downstairs straight toward the uproar ran Sengoun with Neeland beside

him. The halls were swimming in acrid fumes; the floors trembled and

shook under the shock as a struggling, fighting knot of men went

tumbling down the stairway below, reached the landing and burst into

the rooms of the Cercle Extranationale.

Leaning over the banisters, Neeland saw Golden Beard turn on Doc

Curfoot, raging, magnificent as a Viking, his blue eyes ablaze. He

hurled his empty pistol at the American; seized chairs, bronzes,

andirons, the clock from the mantel, and sent a storm of heavy

missiles through the doorway among the knot of men who were pressing

him and who had already seized Ali Baba.