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<h2> CHAPTER XXI THE FORT OF ST. NICHOLAS </h2>
<p>“Well, you have proved indeed,” Caretto said, when Gervaise finished his
story, “that you are worthy of the bestowal of a gage by a fair damsel. I
do not think that many knights, however true they might be to the donor,
would have suffered months of slavery in order to regain a token, lost by
no fault or carelessness of their own; and no lady could have blamed or
held them in any way dishonoured by the loss.”</p>
<p>“I had a message by the Viscount De Monteuil from Lady Claudia the other
day, saying that she trusted I had kept her gage. I can assure you that
the six months of slavery were cheaply purchased by the pleasure I felt
that I still possessed it; and I was glad, too, to learn that I had not
been forgotten by her.”</p>
<p>“Of that you may well assure yourself, Tresham; my commandery is not far
from Genoa, and I was frequently with her, but never without her drawing
me aside and asking me if I had heard any news of you, and talking over
with me the chances there might be of your escape. I can tell you that
there are not a few young nobles of Genoa who would give much to be
allowed as you are to carry her gage, or wear her colours. You should see
her now; you would scarce know her again, so altered and improved is she;
there is no fairer face in all Italy.”</p>
<p>“I hope some day to meet her again,” Gervaise replied; “although I own to
knowing it were better that I should not do so. Until she gave me her gage
I had scarcely noticed her. I have, as you know, no experience of women,
and had so much on my mind at the time, what with the fuss they were
making about us, and the question of getting the prizes here, that in
truth I paid but slight attention to the fair faces of the dames of Genoa.
But the gracious and earnest way in which, though scarce more than a
child, she gave me her gage, and vowed that no other knight should possess
one so long as I lived, struck me so greatly that I own I gave the matter
much more thought than was right or becoming in one of our Order. The
incident was much more gratifying to me than all the honour paid me by the
Republic, and during the long months of my captivity it has recurred to me
so frequently that I have in vain endeavoured to chase it from my
thoughts, as sinful thus to allow myself constantly to think of any woman.
Do not mistake me, Sir Fabricius. I am speaking to you as to a confessor,
and just as I have kept her amulet hidden from all, so is the thought of
her a secret I would not part with for my life. I do not for a moment
deceive myself with the thought that, beyond the fact that her gift has
made her feel an interest in me and my fate, she has any sentiment in the
matter: probably, indeed, she looks back upon the gift as a foolish act of
girlish enthusiasm that led her into making a promise that she now cannot
but find unpleasantly binding; for it is but natural that among the young
nobles of her own rank and country there must be some whom she would see
with pleasure wearing her colours.”</p>
<p>Caretto looked at him with some amusement.</p>
<p>“Were you not bound by your vows as a knight of the Order, how would you
feel in the matter?”</p>
<p>“I should feel worse,” Gervaise said, without hesitation. “I have
oftentimes thought that over, and I see that it is good for me I am so
bound. It does not decrease my chances, for, as I know, there are no
chances; but it renders it more easy for me to know that it is so.”</p>
<p>“But why should you say that you have no chances, Tresham?”</p>
<p>“Because it is easy to see that it is so. I am, save for my commandery and
prospects in the Order, a penniless young knight, without home or estate,
without even a place in my country, and that country not hers. I know that
it is not only sinful, but mad, for me to think so frequently of her, but
at least I am not mad enough to think that I can either win the heart or
aspire to the hand of one who is, you say, so beautiful, and who is,
moreover, as I know, the heiress to wide estates.”</p>
<p>“'There was a squire of low degree, Loved the king's daughter of
Hungarie,'” Caretto sang, with a laugh. “You are not of low degree, but of
noble family, Gervaise. You are not a squire, but a knight, and already a
very distinguished one; nor is the young lady, though she be a rich
heiress, a king's daughter.”</p>
<p>“At any rate, the squire was not vowed to celibacy. No, no, Sir Fabricius,
it is a dream, and a pleasant one; but I know perfectly well that it is
but a dream, and one that will do me no harm so long as I ever bear in
mind that it is so. Many a knight of the Order before me has borne a
lady's gage, and carried it valiantly in many a fight, and has been no
less true to his vows for doing so.”</p>
<p>“Upon the contrary, he has been all the better a knight, Gervaise; it is
always good for a knight, whether he belongs to the Order or not, to prize
one woman above all others, and to try to make himself worthy of his
ideal. As to the vow of celibacy, you know that ere now knights have been
absolved from their vows, and methinks that, after the service you have
rendered to Italy by ridding the sea of those corsairs, his Holiness would
make no difficulty in granting any request that you might make him in that
or any other direction. I don't know whether you are aware that, after you
sailed from here, letters came from Rome as well as from Pisa, Florence,
and Naples, expressive of the gratitude felt for the services that you had
rendered, and of their admiration for the splendid exploit that you had
performed.”</p>
<p>“No; the grand master has had his hands so full of other matters that
doubtless an affair so old escaped his memory. Indeed, he may have
forgotten that I sailed before the letters arrived.”</p>
<p>“Do not forget to jog his memory on the subject, for I can tell you that
the letters did not come alone, but were each accompanied by presents
worthy of the service you rendered. But as to the vows?”</p>
<p>“As to the vows, I feel as I said just now, that I would not free myself
of them if I could, for, being bound by them, I can the more easily and
pleasantly enjoy my dream. Besides, what should I do if I left the Order
without home, country, or means, and with naught to do but to sell my
sword to some warlike monarch? Besides, Caretto, I love the Order, and
deem it the highest privilege to fight against the Moslems, and to uphold
the banner of the Cross.”</p>
<p>“As to that, you could, like De Monteuil and many other knights here,
always come out to aid the Order in time of need. As to the vows, I am not
foolish enough to suppose that you would ask to be relieved from them,
until you had assured yourself that Claudia was also desirous that you
should be free.”</p>
<p>“It is absurd,” Gervaise said, almost impatiently. “Do not let us talk any
more about it, Caretto, or it will end by turning my head and making me
presumptuous enough to imagine that the Lady Claudia, who only saw me for
three or four days, and that while she was still but a girl, has been
thinking of me seriously since.”</p>
<p>“I do not know Claudia's thoughts,” Caretto remarked drily, “but I do know
that last year she refused to listen to at least a score of excellent
offers for her hand, including one from a son of the doge himself, and
that without any reasonable cause assigned by her, to the great wonderment
of all, seeing that she does not appear to have any leaning whatever
towards a life in a nunnery. At any rate, if at some future time you
should pluck up heart of grace to tell her you love her, and she refuses
you, you will at least have the consolation of knowing that you are not
the only one, by a long way, whose suit has been rejected. And now as to
our affairs here. Methinks that tomorrow that battery will open fire upon
us. It seems completed.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I think they are nearly ready,” Gervaise said, turning his mind
resolutely from the subject they had been discussing. “From the palace
wall I saw, before I came down here, large numbers of men rolling huge
stones down towards the church. Our guns were firing steadily; but could
they load them ten times as fast as they do, they would hardly be able to
stop the work, so numerous are those engaged upon it.”</p>
<p>“Yes we shall soon learn something of the quality of their artillery. The
tower is strong enough to resist ordinary guns, but it will soon crumble
under the blows of such enormous missiles. Never have I seen or heard in
Europe of cannon of such size; but indeed, in this matter the Turks are
far ahead of us, and have, ever since cannon were first cast, made them of
much larger size than we in Europe have done. However, there is one
comfort; they may destroy this fort, but they have still to cross the
water, and this under the fire of the guns on the palace walls; when they
once land, their great battery must cease firing, and we shall be able to
meet them on equal terms in the breach. Fight as hard as they may, I think
we can hold our own, especially as reinforcements can come down to us more
quickly than they can be brought across the water.”</p>
<p>The next morning, at daybreak, the deep boom of a gun announced to the
city that the great battering cannon had begun their work. In the fort the
sleeping knights sprang to their feet at the concussion that seemed to
shake it to its centre. They would have rushed to the walls, but Caretto
at once issued orders that no one should show himself on the battlements
unless under special orders.</p>
<p>“There is nothing whatever to be done until the Turks have breached the
wall, and are ready to advance to attack us. Every sword will be needed
when that hour comes, and each man owes it to the Order to run no useless
risk, until the hour when he is required to do his share of the fighting.”</p>
<p>The time required to reload the great cannon was considerable, but at
regular intervals they hurled their heavy missiles against the wall, the
distance being so short that every ball struck it. After some twenty shots
had been fired, Caretto, accompanied by Gervaise, went out by a small gate
on the eastern side of the tower, and made their way round by the foot of
the wall to see what effect the shots had produced on the solid masonry.</p>
<p>Caretto shook his head.</p>
<p>“It is as I feared,” he said. “No stones ever quarried by man could long
resist such tremendous blows. In some places, you see, the stones are
starred and cracked, in others the shock seems to have pulverised the spot
where it struck; but, worse, still, the whole face of the wall is shaken.
There are cracks between the stones, and some of these are partly bulged
out and partly driven in. It may take some time before a breach is
effected, but sooner or later the wall will surely be demolished.”</p>
<p>“I will go up and make my report to the grand master.”</p>
<p>“Do so, Gervaise. I almost wonder that he has not himself come down to see
how the wall is resisting.”</p>
<p>Gervaise, on reaching the palace, heard that D'Aubusson was at present
engaged in examining no less a person than Maitre Georges, the right hand
of Paleologus, who had soon after daybreak presented himself before the
wall on the other side of the town, declaring that he had left the Turkish
service, and craving to be admitted. News had been sent at once to
D'Aubusson, who despatched two of the senior knights, with orders to admit
him and receive him with all honour. This had been done, and the grand
master, with some of his council, were now closeted with the newcomer.
Several of the knights were gathered in the courtyard, discussing the
event. There was no question that if the renegade came in good faith, his
defection would be a serious blow to the assailants, and that his well
known skill and experience would greatly benefit the defenders.</p>
<p>“For my part,” Sir John Boswell, who formed one of the detachment which
the English langue, as well as all the others, contributed to form the
garrison of the palace said, “I would have hung the fellow up by the neck
over the gateway, and he should never have set foot within the walls.
Think you that a man who has denied his faith and taken service with his
enemies is to be trusted, whatever oaths he may take?”</p>
<p>“You must remember, Boswell,” another said, “that hitherto Georges has not
fought against Christians, but has served Mahomet in his wars with other
infidels. I am not saying a word in defence of his having become a
renegade; yet even a renegade may have some sort of heart, and now that he
has been called upon to fight against Christians he may well have repented
of his faults, and determined to sacrifice his position and prospects
rather than aid in the attack on the city.”</p>
<p>“We shall see. As for me, I regard a renegade as the most contemptible of
wretches, and have no belief that they have either a heart or conscience.”</p>
<p>When Maitre Georges came out from the palace, laughing and talking with
the two knights who had entered with him, it was evident that he was well
pleased with his reception by the grand master, who had assigned to him a
suite of apartments in the guest house. In reality, however, D'Aubusson
had no doubt that his object was a treacherous one, and that, like
Demetrius, who had come under the pretence of bringing about a truce, his
object was to find out the weak points and to supply the Turks with
information. Georges had, in his conversation with him, laid great stress
on the strength of the Turkish army, the excellent quality of the troops,
and the enormous battering train that had been prepared. But every word he
spoke but added to the grand master's suspicions; for if the man
considered that the capture of the city was morally certain, it would be
simply throwing away his life to enter it as a deserter.</p>
<p>The grand master was, however, too politic to betray any doubt of Georges'
sincerity. Were he treated as a traitor, Paleologus might find another
agent to do the work. It was, therefore, better to feign a belief in his
story, to obtain all the information possible from him, and at the same
time to prevent his gaining any knowledge of affairs that would be of the
slightest use to the Turks. Instructions were therefore given to the two
knights that, while Georges was to be treated with all courtesy, he was to
be strictly watched, though in such a manner that he should be in
ignorance of it, and that, whenever he turned his steps in the direction
of those parts of the defences where fresh works had been recently added
and preparations made of which it was desirable the Turks should be kept
in ignorance, he was to be met, as if by accident, by one of the knights
told off for the purpose, and his steps diverted in another direction.</p>
<p>Georges soon made himself popular among many of the knights, who had no
suspicions of his real character. He was a man of exceptional figure,
tall, strong, splendidly proportioned, with a handsome face and gallant
bearing. He was extremely well informed on all subjects, had travelled
widely, had seen many adventures, was full of anecdote, and among the
younger knights, therefore, he was soon regarded as a charming companion.
His very popularity among them aided D'Aubusson's plans, as Georges was
generally the centre of a group of listeners, and so had but few
opportunities of getting away quietly to obtain the information he sought.
Gervaise delivered his report to the grand master.</p>
<p>“I am free now,” D'Aubusson said, “and will accompany you to St. Nicholas.
I have been detained by the coming of this man Georges. He is a clever
knave, and, I doubt not, has come as a spy. However, I have taken measures
that he shall learn nothing that can harm us. No lives have been lost at
the tower, I hope?”</p>
<p>“No, sir; Caretto has forbidden any to show themselves on the walls.”</p>
<p>“He has done well. This is no time for rash exposure, and where there is
naught to be gained, it is a grave fault to run risks.”</p>
<p>On arriving at the end of the mole, D'Aubusson, accompanied by Caretto,
made an investigation of the effect of the Turks' fire.</p>
<p>“'Tis worse than I expected,” he said. “When we laid out our
fortifications the thought that such guns as these would be used against
them never entered our minds. Against ordinary artillery the walls would
stand a long battering; but it is clear that we shall have to depend more
upon our swords than upon our walls for our defence. Fortunately, although
the Turks have indeed chosen the spot where our walls are most open to the
assaults of their battery, they have to cross the water to attack the
breach when it is made, and will have to fight under heavy disadvantage.”</p>
<p>“Tresham was last night saying to me, that it seemed to him it would not
be a difficult matter for one who spoke Turkish well, to issue at night on
the other side of the town, and to make his way round to the battery,
disguised of course as a Turkish soldier, and then, mixing with the
artillery men, to drive a spike into one of the touch holes. He said that
he would gladly volunteer for the task.”</p>
<p>D'Aubusson shook his head decidedly. “It would be too dangerous; and even
were a spike driven in, the Turks would have no great difficulty in
extracting it, for the tubes are so big that a man might crawl in and
drive the spike up from the inside. Moreover, could one or more of the
guns be disabled permanently, others would be brought down and set in
their place, so that nothing would be gained but a very short delay, which
would be of no advantage to us, and certainly would in no way justify the
risking of the life of so distinguished a young knight.”</p>
<p>The bombardment of St. Nicholas continued for some days. A breach was fast
forming in the wall, and a slope composed of the fallen rubbish extended
from the front of the breach to the water's edge. The grand master was
frequently on the spot, and as this was at present the sole object of
attack, the garrison was strengthened by as many knights as could be
sheltered within its walls. At night the shattered masonry that had fallen
inside was carried out, and with it a new work thrown up across the mole,
to strengthen the defence on that side, should the enemy land between the
town and the fort. Small batteries were planted wherever they could sweep
the approaches to the breach, and planks studded with nails were sunk in
the shallow water of the harbour, to impede the progress of those who
might attempt to swim or wade across. For the time, therefore, the
functions of Gervaise were in abeyance, and he laboured with the rest of
the garrison at the defences.</p>
<p>At daybreak on the 9th of June, a great number of vessels and boats,
crowded with soldiers, bore down on St. Nicholas. As they approached,
every gun on the fortifications that could be brought to bear upon them
opened fire; but in a dense mass they advanced. Some made their way to the
rocks and landed the soldiers there; others got alongside the mole; but
the majority grounded in the shallow water of the harbour, and the troops,
leaping out, waded to the foot of the breach. On its crest D'Aubusson
himself had taken up his station. Beside him stood Caretto, and around
them the most distinguished knights of the Order. With wild shouts the
Turks rushed up the breach, and swarmed thickly up the ruined masonry
until, at its summit, they encountered the steel clad line of the
defenders. For hours the terrible struggle continued. As fast as the head
of the Turkish column broke and melted away against the obstacle they
tried in vain to penetrate, fresh reinforcements took the place of those
who had fallen, and in point of valour and devotion the Moslem showed
himself a worthy antagonist of the Christian. It was not only at the
breach that the conflict raged. At other points the Turks, well provided
with ladders, fixed them against the walls, and desperately strove to
obtain a footing there. From the breach clouds of dust rose from under the
feet of the combatants, mingling with the smoke of the cannon on the
ramparts, the fort, and Turkish ships, and at times entirely hid from the
sight of the anxious spectators on the walls of the town and fortress, and
of the still more numerous throng of Turks on St. Stephen's Hill, the
terrible struggle that continued without a moment's intermission.</p>
<p>The combatants now fought in comparative silence. The knights, exhausted
and worn out by their long efforts beneath the blazing sun, still showed
an unbroken front; but it was only occasionally that the battle cry of the
Order rose in the air, as a fresh body of assailants climbed up the corpse
strewn breach. The yell of the Moslems rose less frequently; they
sacrificed their lives as freely and devotedly as those who led the first
onset had done; but as the hours wore on, the assurance of victory died
out, and a doubt as to whether it was possible to break through the line
of their terrible foes gained ground. D'Aubusson himself, although, in
spite of the remonstrances of the knights, always in the thickest of the
fray, was yet ever watchful, and quickly perceived where the defenders
were hotly pressed, and where support was most needed. Gervaise fought by
his side, so that, when necessary, he could carry his orders to a little
body of knights, drawn up in reserve, and despatch them to any point where
aid was needed. The cannon still continued their fire on both sides. A
fragment of one of the stone balls from a basilisk struck off D'Aubusson's
helmet. He selected another from among the fallen knights, and resumed his
place in the line. Still the contest showed no signs of terminating. The
Turkish galleys ever brought up reinforcements, while the defenders grew
fewer, and more exhausted. During a momentary pause, while a fresh body of
Turks were landing, Gervaise said to the grand master,</p>
<p>“If you will give me leave, sir, I will go out at the watergate, swim up
the inner harbour, and in a very short time turn a few of the craft lying
there into fire ships, and tow them out with a couple of galleys. At any
rate, we can fire all these craft that have grounded, and create a panic
among the others.”</p>
<p>“Well thought of, Gervaise! I will write an order on one of my tablets. Do
you take my place for a minute.” Withdrawing behind the line, the grand
master sat down on a fragment of stone, and, drawing a tablet from a pouch
in his girdle, he wrote on it, “In all things carry out the instructions
of Sir Gervaise Tresham: he is acting by my orders and authority, and has
full power in all respects.”</p>
<p>He handed the slip of parchment to Gervaise, who hurried to the water gate
in the inner harbour, threw off his helmet and armour, issued out at the
gate, and plunged into the sea. He swam out some distance, in order to
avoid the missiles of the Turks, who were trying to scale the wall from
the mole, and then directed his course to St. Michael's, which guarded the
inner entrance to the fort. He had fastened the parchment in his hair, and
as some of the garrison of the tower, noticing his approach, came down to
assist him, he handed it to them and was at once taken to the commander of
St. Michael, answering as he went the anxious questions as to how matters
stood at the breach.</p>
<p>“Aid is sorely needed. The Turks have gained no foot of ground as yet, but
many of the knights are killed and most of the others utterly exhausted
with heat and labour. Unless aid reaches them speedily, the tower, with
all its defenders, will be lost.”</p>
<p>The instant the commander knew what was required, he bade six of the
knights embark with Gervaise in a boat moored behind the tower, and row up
the harbour to the spot where the shipping was all massed together,
protected by the high ground of the fortress from the Turkish fire.
Gervaise waved his hand, as he neared the end of the harbour, to the
officer on the walls, and while the six knights who were with him ran off
to tell the master of the galleys to prepare two of them to leave the port
instantly, Gervaise explained to the officer in charge of the wall at that
point the plan that he was charged to carry out, and asked for twenty
knights to assist him.</p>
<p>“It will leave us very weak along here,” the officer said. “Then let me
have ten, and send for another ten from other parts of the wall. Here is
the grand master's order, giving me full power and authority, and it is
all important that no single moment shall be wasted.”</p>
<p>“You shall have twenty of mine,” the officer said, “and I will draw ten
from the langue next to us to fill their places.”</p>
<p>In a few minutes the quay was a scene of bustle and activity. Gervaise
picked out ten of the smallest vessels; the knights went among the other
ships, seized all goods and stores that would be useful as combustibles,
and compelled the crews to carry them on board the craft chosen as fire
ships. Then barrels were broken open, old sails and faggots saturated with
oil and pitch, and in little more than a quarter of an hour after his
arrival, Gervaise had the satisfaction of seeing that the ten boats were
all filled with combustibles, and ready to be set on fire. He now called
for volunteers from the sailors, and a number of them at once came
forward, including many of the captains. He placed one of these in command
of each fire ship, and gave him four of the sailors.</p>
<p>“The galleys will tow you out,” he said, “and take you close to the
enemy's ships. We shall range you five abreast, and when I give the word,
the one at the end of the line will steer for the nearest Turk, and, with
oars and poles, get alongside. The captain will then light the train of
powder in the hold, throw the torch among the straw, and see that, if
possible, the men fasten her to the Turk; but if this cannot be done, it
is not essential, for in the confusion the enemy will not be able to get
out of the way of the fire ship as it drives down against her. At the last
moment you will take to your boats and row back here. We will protect you
from the assaults of any of the Turkish ships.”</p>
<p>Having made sure that all the captains understood the orders, Gervaise
took command of one of the galleys, the senior knight going on board the
other. The ten fire ships were now poled out until five were ranged
abreast behind each craft; Gervaise requested the commander of the other
galley to lie off the point of St. Nicholas until he had got rid of his
five fire ships, then to advance and launch his craft against the Turks.
The smoke of the guns lay so heavy on the water, and the combatants were
so intent upon the struggle at the breach, that Gervaise steered his
galley into the midst of the Turkish vessels laden with troops ready to
disembark, without attracting any notice; then, standing upon the
taffrail, he signalled to the two outside boats to throw off their ropes
and make for the Turkish ship nearest to them. This they did, and it was
not until a sheet of flame rose alongside, that the enemy awoke to the
sense of danger.</p>
<p>The other three fire ships were almost immediately cast off. Two of them
were equally successful, but the Turks managed to thrust off the third.
She drifted, however, through the shipping, and presently brought up
alongside one of the vessels fast aground. With but ten knights, Gervaise
could not attack one of the larger vessels, crowded with troops; but there
were many fishing boats that had been pressed into the service, and
against one of these Gervaise ordered the men to steer the galley. A shout
to the rowers made them redouble their efforts. A yell of dismay arose
from the Turkish troops as they saw the galley bearing down upon them, and
frantic efforts were made to row out of her way. These were in vain, for
her sharp prow struck them amidships, cutting the boat almost in two, and
she sank like a stone, the galley, without a pause, making for another
boat.</p>
<p>Looking back, Gervaise saw that his consort was already in the midst of
the Turks, among whom the wildest confusion prevailed, each ship trying to
extricate herself from the mass, upon which the batteries of the fortress
now concentrated their efforts. Two fresh columns of flame had already
shot up, and satisfied that all was going well, Gervaise continued his
attack upon the smaller craft, six of whom were overtaken and sunk. Three
or four of the larger vessels endeavoured to lay themselves alongside the
galley, but her speed was so superior to theirs that she easily evaded the
attempts, and, sweeping round, rejoined the other galley which had just
issued from among the Turks, who were already in full retreat. The
defenders of St. Nicholas, reanimated by the sight of the discomfiture of
the Turkish fleet, with a loud shout rushed down from the spot which they
had held for so many hours, drove their assailants before them, and flung
themselves upon the crowd assembled at the foot of the breach.</p>
<p>These had already suffered terribly from the fire of the batteries. Again
and again they had striven to storm the mound of rubbish, and had each
time been repulsed, with the loss of their bravest leaders. Seeing
themselves abandoned by the ships, a panic seized them, and as the knights
rushed down upon them they relinquished all thoughts of resistance, and
dashed into the shallow water. Many were drowned in the attempt to swim
across the deep channel in the middle, some succeeded, while others made
their escape in the boats in which they had been brought ashore from the
ships.</p>
<p>The struggle was over. The two galleys made for the breach, and the
knights leapt out as soon as the boats grounded, and, wading ashore,
joined the group that had so long and gallantly sustained the unequal
fight. Fatigue, exhaustion, and wounds, were forgotten in the triumph of
the moment, and they crowded round the grand master and Caretto, to whose
joint exertions the success of the defence was so largely due.</p>
<p>“Do not thank me, comrades,” D'Aubusson said. “No man has today fought
better than the rest. Every knight has shown himself worthy of the fame of
our Order. The meed of praise for our success is first due to Sir Gervaise
Tresham. At the moment when I began to doubt whether we could much longer
withstand the swarms of fresh foes who continued to pour against us, while
we were overcome by heat and labour, Sir Gervaise, who had throughout been
fighting at my side, offered to swim into the port, to fit out a dozen of
the merchant craft there as fire ships, and to tow them round into the
midst of the Turkish vessels behind the two galleys that were lying ready
for service. I remembered how he had before destroyed the corsair fleet at
Sardinia with fire ships, and the proposal seemed to me as an inspiration
sent from Heaven, at this moment of our great peril. I wrote him an order,
giving him full authority to act in my name, and in a time that seemed to
me incredibly short I saw him round the point with the fire ships in tow.
You saw, as well as I did, how completely the plan was carried out. Ten or
twelve of the Turkish ships are a mass of flames, and besides these I
noted that the galley ran down and destroyed several smaller craft filled
with soldiers. The panic in the ships spread to the troops on shore, and
rendered the last part of our task an easy one. I say it from my heart
that I consider it is to Sir Gervaise Tresham that we owe our success, and
that, had it not been for his happy thought, the sun would have gone down
on our dead bodies lying on the summit of the breach, and on the Turkish
flag waving over the fort of St. Nicholas.”</p>
<p>Until now none of the defenders of the breach had known how what seemed to
them an almost miraculous change in the fortune of the fight had come
about, and they thronged round Gervaise, shaking his hand, and many of
them warmly embracing him, according to the custom of the time.</p>
<p>“It was but natural that the idea should occur to me,” he said, “having
before successfully encountered them with fire ships; and as all on shore,
and especially these knights, aided me with all their power, it took but a
brief time to get the boats in readiness for burning. Much credit, too, is
due to the merchant captains and sailors who volunteered to take charge of
the fire ships and to manoeuver them alongside the Turks.”</p>
<p>The grand master and the knights who had borne the brunt of the battle now
retired along the mole to the town, bearing with them their most seriously
wounded comrades, and assisting those whose wounds were less severe. The
twenty knights who had manned the two galleys remained in the fort.
Caretto continued in command, as, although he had suffered several wounds,
he refused to relinquish his post. Gervaise, who had,—thanks partly
to his skill with his weapons, but still more to the temper of the
splendid suit of armour presented to him by Genoa,—escaped without a
scratch, volunteered to remain with him until next morning, his principal
motive for making the request being his desire to escape from further
congratulations and praise for the success of his plan. After Caretto's
wounds had been dressed by the knights, and he and Gervaise had partaken
of some food and wine, which they greatly needed, Caretto was persuaded to
lie down for a time, the knights promising to bring him word at once if
they perceived any movement whatever on the part of the enemy. Gervaise
remained with him, feeling, now the excitement was over, that he sorely
needed rest after his exertions in the full heat of the summer sun.</p>
<p>“It has been a great day, Gervaise,” Caretto said, “and I only hope that
when again I go into battle with the infidel, I shall have you at hand to
come forward at the critical moment with some master stroke to secure
victory. Claudia will be pleased indeed when she hears how the knight who
bears her gage has again distinguished himself. She will look on the gay
and idle young fops of Genoa with greater disdain than ever. Now you need
not say anything in protest, the more so as I feel grievously weak, and
disposed for sleep.”</p>
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