“No,” answered Moret decidedly. “You must surrender at once, here and now.”
“We shall do no such thing,” replied the War-Minister. “The palace is defensible. We shall hold it until the return of the fleet and of the victorious field-army.”
“You refuse all terms?”
“We refuse all you have offered.”
“Soldiers,” said Moret turning again to the men, “I implore you not to throw away your lives. I offer fair terms; do not reject them.”
“Young man,” said Sorrento with rising anger, “I have a somewhat lengthy score to settle with you already. You are a civilian and are ignorant of the customs of war. It is my duty to warn you that, if you continue to attempt to seduce the loyalty of the Government troops, I shall fire at you.” He drew his revolver.
Moret should have heeded; but tactless, brave, and impulsive as he was, he recked little. His warm heart generously hoped to save further loss of life. Besides, he did not believe that Sorrento would shoot him in cold blood; it would be too merciless. “I offer you all life,” he cried; “do not choose death.”
Sorrento raised his pistol and fired. Moret fell to the ground, and his blood began to trickle over the white flag. For a moment he twisted and quivered, and then lay still. There were horrified murmurs from the bystanders, who had not expected to see the threat carried out. But it is not well to count on the mercy of such men as this War-Minister; they live their lives too much by rule and regulation.
The two men outside the gate, hearing the shot, looked in, saw, and ran swiftly back to their comrades, while the garrison, feeling that they must now abandon all hope, returned to their posts slowly and sullenly. The report of a truce had drawn the President from his room, with a fresh prospect of life, and perhaps of vengeance, opening on his imagination. As he came down the steps into the courtyard, the shot, in such close proximity, startled him; when he saw the condition of the bearer of terms, he staggered. “Good God!” he said to Sorrento, “what have you done?”
“I have shot a rebel, Sir,” replied the War-Minister, his heart full of misgivings, but trying to brazen it out, “for inciting the troops to mutiny and desertion, after due warning that his flag would no longer protect him.”
Molara quivered from head to foot; he felt the last retreat cut off. “You have condemned us all to death,” he said. Then he stooped and drew a paper which protruded from the dead man’s coat. It ran as follows:
I authorise you to accept the surrender of Antonio Molara, ex-President of the Republic, and of such officers, soldiers, and adherents as may be holding the Presidential Palace. Their lives are to be spared, and they shall be protected pending the decision of the Government.
And Sorrento had killed him—the only man who could save them from the fury of the crowd. Too sick at heart to speak Molara turned away, and as he did so the firing from the houses of the square recommenced with savage vigour. The besiegers knew now how their messenger had fared.
And all the while Moret lay very still out there in the courtyard. All his ambitions, his enthusiasms, his hopes had come to a full stop; his share in the world’s affairs was over; he had sunk into the ocean of the past, and left scarcely a bubble behind. In all the contriving of the plot against the Lauranian Government Savrola’s personality had dwarfed his. Yet this was a man of heart and brain and nerve, one who might have accomplished much; and he had a mother and two young sisters who loved the soil he trod on, and thought him the finest fellow in the world.
Sorrento stood viewing his handiwork for a long time, with a growing sense of dissatisfaction at his deed. His sour, hard nature was incapable of genuine remorse, but he had known Molara for many years and was shocked to see his pain, and annoyed to think that he was the cause. He had not realised that the President wished to surrender; otherwise, he said to himself, he might have been more lenient. Was there no possible way of repairing the harm? The man who had authorised Moret to accept their surrender had power with the crowd; he would be at the Mayoralty—he must be sent for—but how?
Lieutenant Tiro approached with a coat in his hands. Disgusted at his superior’s brutality, he was determined to express his feelings, clearly if not verbally. He bent over the body and composed the limbs; then he laid the coat over the white expressionless face, and rising said insolently to the Colonel: “I wonder if they’ll do that for you in a couple of hours’ time, Sir.”
Sorrento looked at him, and laughed harshly. “Pooh! What do I care? When you have seen as much fighting as I have, you will not be so squeamish.”
“I am not likely to see much more, now that you have killed the only man who could accept our surrender.”
“There is another,” said the War-Minister, “Savrola. If you want to live, go and bring him to call off his hounds.”
Sorrento spoke bitterly, but his words set the Subaltern’s mind working. Savrola—he knew him, liked him, and felt they had something in common. Such a one would come if he were summoned; but to leave the palace seemed impossible. Although the attacks of the rebels had been directed against the side of the main entrance only, a close investment and a dropping musketry were maintained throughout the complete circle. To pass the line of besiegers by the roads was out of the question. Tiro thought of the remaining alternatives: a tunnel, that did not exist; a balloon, there was not
