The Bars of Iron eBook

Ethel May Dell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 601 pages of information about The Bars of Iron.

The Bars of Iron eBook

Ethel May Dell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 601 pages of information about The Bars of Iron.

The move was practically inevitable, but its effect was such as only one anticipated.  That one was his adversary, who slowly bent under his weight as though overcome thereby, shifting his grip lower and lower till it almost looked as if he were about to collapse altogether.  But just as the breaking-point seemed to be reached there came a change.  He gathered himself together and with gigantic exertion began to straighten his bent muscles.  Slowly but irresistibly he heaved his enemy upwards.  There came a moment of desperate, confused struggle; and then, as the man lost his balance at last, he relaxed his grip quite suddenly, flinging him headlong over his shoulder.

It was a clean throw, contrived with masterly assurance, the result of deliberate and trained calculation.  The bully pitched upon his head on the rough stones of the yard, and turned a complete somersault with the violence of his fall.

A shout of amazement went up from the spectators.  This end of the struggle was totally unexpected.

The successful combatant remained standing with the sweat pouring from his face and the blood still running down his chin.  He stretched out his arms with a slow, mechanical movement as if to test the condition of his muscles after the tremendous strain he had put upon them.  Then, still as it were mechanically, he felt the torn collar-band of his shirt, with speculative fingers.  Finally he whizzed round on the heels and stared at the huddled form of his fallen foe.

A shabby little man with thick, sandy eyebrows had gone to his assistance, but he lay quite motionless in a twisted, ungainly attitude.  The flare of the lamp was reflected in his glassy, upturned eyes.  Dumbly his conqueror stood staring down at him.  He seemed to stand above them all in that his moment of dreadful victory.

He spoke at length, and through his voice there ran a curious tremor as of a man a little giddy, a little dazed by immense and appalling height.

“I thought I could do it!” he said.  “I—­thought I could!”

It was his moment of triumph, of irresistible elation.  The devil in him had fought—­and conquered.

It swayed him—­and passed.  He was left white to the lips and suddenly, terribly, afraid.

“What have I done to him?” he asked, and the tremor was gone from his voice; it was level, dead level.  “I haven’t killed him really, have I?”

No one answered him.  They were crowding round the fallen man, stooping over him with awe-struck whispering, straightening the crumpled, inert limbs, trying to place the heavy frame in a natural posture.

The boy pressed forward to look, but abruptly his supporter caught him by the shoulder and pulled him back.

“No, no!” he said in a sharp undertone.  “You’re no good here.  Get out of it!  Put on your clothes and—­go!”

He spoke urgently.  The boy stared at him, suffering the compelling hand.  All the fight had gone completely out of him.  He was passive with the paralysis of a great horror.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Bars of Iron from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.