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<h2> XIII. How Baron Conrad Held the Bridge. </h2>
<p>As the last of his followers swept around the curving road and was lost to
sight, Baron Conrad gave himself a shake, as though to drive away the
thoughts that lay upon him. Then he rode slowly forward to the middle of
the bridge, where he wheeled his horse so as to face his coming enemies.
He lowered the vizor of his helmet and bolted it to its place, and then
saw that sword and dagger were loose in the scabbard and easy to draw when
the need for drawing should arise.</p>
<p>Down the steep path from the hill above swept the pursuing horsemen. Down
the steep path to the bridge-head and there drew rein; for in the middle
of the narrow way sat the motionless, steel-clad figure upon the great
war-horse, with wide, red, panting nostrils, and body streaked with sweat
and flecked with patches of foam.</p>
<p>One side of the roadway of the bridge was guarded by a low stone wall; the
other side was naked and open and bare to the deep, slow-moving water
beneath. It was a dangerous place to attack a desperate man clad in armor
of proof.</p>
<p>"Forward!" cried Baron Henry, but not a soul stirred in answer, and still
the iron-clad figure sat motionless and erect upon the panting horse.</p>
<p>"How," cried the Baron Henry, "are ye afraid of one man? Then follow me!"
and he spurred forward to the bridge-head. But still no one moved in
answer, and the Lord of Trutz-Drachen reined back his horse again. He
wheeled his horse and glared round upon the stolid faces of his followers,
until his eyes seemed fairly to blaze with passion beneath the bars of his
vizor.</p>
<p>Baron Conrad gave a roar of laughter. "How now," he cried; "are ye all
afraid of one man? Is there none among ye that dares come forward and meet
me? I know thee, Baron Henry thou art not afraid to cut off the hand of a
little child. Hast thou not now the courage to face the father?"</p>
<p>Baron Henry gnashed his teeth with rage as he glared around upon the faces
of his men-at-arms. Suddenly his eye lit upon one of them. "Ha! Carl
Spigler," he cried, "thou hast thy cross-bow with thee;—shoot me
down yonder dog! Nay," he said, "thou canst do him no harm under his
armor; shoot the horse upon which he sits."</p>
<p>Baron Conrad heard the speech. "Oh! thou coward villain!" he cried, "stay;
do not shoot the good horse. I will dismount and fight ye upon foot."
Thereupon, armed as he was, he leaped clashing from his horse and turning
the animal's head, gave it a slap upon the flank. The good horse first
trotted and then walked to the further end of the bridge, where it stopped
and began cropping at the grass that grew beside the road.</p>
<p>"Now then!" cried Baron Henry, fiercely, "now then, ye cannot fear him,
villains! Down with him! forward!"</p>
<p>Slowly the troopers spurred their horses forward upon the bridge and
toward that one figure that, grasping tightly the great two-handed sword,
stood there alone guarding the passage.</p>
<p>Then Baron Conrad whirled the great blade above his head, until it caught
the sunlight and flashed again. He did not wait for the attack, but when
the first of the advancing horsemen had come within a few feet of him, he
leaped with a shout upon them. The fellow thrust at him with his lance,
and the Baron went staggering a few feet back, but instantly he recovered
himself and again leaped forward. The great sword flashed in the air,
whistling; it fell, and the nearest man dropped his lance, clattering, and
with a loud, inarticulate cry, grasped the mane of his horse with both
hands. Again the blade whistled in the air, and this time it was stained
with red. Again it fell, and with another shrill cry the man toppled
headlong beneath the horse's feet. The next instant they were upon him,
each striving to strike at the one figure, to ride him down, or to thrust
him down with their lances. There was no room now to swing the long blade,
but holding the hilt in both hands, Baron Conrad thrust with it as though
it were a lance, stabbing at horse or man, it mattered not. Crowded upon
the narrow roadway of the bridge, those who attacked had not only to guard
themselves against the dreadful strokes of that terrible sword, but to
keep their wounded horses (rearing and mad with fright) from toppling
bodily over with them into the water beneath.</p>
<p>Presently the cry was raised, "Back! back!" And those nearest the Baron
began reining in their horses. "Forward!" roared Baron Henry, from the
midst of the crowd; but in spite of his command, and even the blows that
he gave, those behind were borne back by those in front, struggling and
shouting, and the bridge was cleared again excepting for three figures
that lay motionless upon the roadway, and that one who, with the
brightness of his armor dimmed and stained, leaned panting against the
wall of the bridge.</p>
<p>The Baron Henry raged like a madman. Gnashing his teeth together, he rode
back a little way; then turning and couching his lance, he suddenly
clapped spurs to his horse, and the next instant came thundering down upon
his solitary enemy.</p>
<p>Baron Conrad whirled his sword in the air, as he saw the other coming like
a thunderbolt upon him; he leaped aside, and the lance passed close to
him. As it passed he struck, and the iron point flew from the shaft of the
spear at the blow, and fell clattering upon the stone roadway of the
bridge.</p>
<p>Baron Henry drew in his horse until it rested upon its haunches, then
slowly reined it backward down the bridge, still facing his foe, and still
holding the wooden stump of the lance in his hand. At the bridge-head he
flung it from him.</p>
<p>"Another lance!" he cried, hoarsely. One was silently reached to him and
he took it, his hand trembling with rage. Again he rode to a little
distance and wheeled his horse; then, driving his steel spurs into its
quivering side, he came again thundering down upon the other. Once more
the terrible sword whirled in the air and fell, but this time the lance
was snatched to one side and the blow fell harmlessly. The next instant,
and with a twitch of the bridle-rein, the horse struck full and fair
against the man.</p>
<p>Conrad of Drachenhausen was whirled backward and downward, and the cruel
iron hoofs crashed over his prostrate body, as horse and man passed with a
rush beyond him and to the bridge-head beyond. A shout went up from those
who stood watching. The next moment the prostrate figure rose and
staggered blindly to the side of the bridge, and stood leaning against the
stone wall.</p>
<p>At the further end of the bridge Baron Henry had wheeled his horse. Once
again he couched lance, and again he drove down upon his bruised and
wounded enemy. This time the lance struck full and fair, and those who
watched saw the steel point pierce the iron breast-plate and then snap
short, leaving the barbed point within the wound.</p>
<p>Baron Conrad sunk to his knees and the Roderburg, looming upon his horse
above him, unsheathed his sword to finish the work he had begun.</p>
<p>Then those who stood looking on saw a wondrous thing happen: the wounded
man rose suddenly to his feet, and before his enemy could strike he
leaped, with a great and bitter cry of agony and despair, upon him as he
sat in the saddle above.</p>
<p>Henry of Trutz-Drachen grasped at his horse's mane, but the attack was so
fierce, so sudden, and so unexpected that before he could save himself he
was dragged to one side and fell crashing in his armor upon the stone
roadway of the bridge.</p>
<p>"The dragon! the dragon!" roared Baron Conrad, in a voice of thunder, and
with the energy of despair he dragged his prostrate foe toward the open
side of the bridge.</p>
<p>"Forward!" cried the chief of the Trutz-Drachen men, and down they rode
upon the struggling knights to the rescue of their master in this new
danger. But they were too late.</p>
<p>There was a pause at the edge of the bridge, for Baron Henry had gained
his feet and, stunned and bewildered as he was by the suddenness of his
fall, he was now struggling fiercely, desperately. For a moment they stood
swaying backward and forward, clasped in one another's arms, the blood
from the wounded man's breast staining the armor of both. The moment
passed and then, with a shower of stones and mortar from beneath their
iron-shod heels, they toppled and fell; there was a thunderous splash in
the water below, and as the men-at-arms came hurrying up and peered with
awe-struck faces over the parapet of the bridge, they saw the whirling
eddies sweep down with the current of the stream, a few bubbles rise to
the surface of the water, and then—nothing; for the smooth river
flowed onward as silently as ever.</p>
<p>Presently a loud voice burst through the awed hush that followed. It came
from William of Roderburg, Baron Henry's kinsman.</p>
<p>"Forward!" he cried. A murmur of voices from the others was all the answer
that he received. "Forward!" cried the young man again, "the boy and those
with him are not so far away but that we might yet catch up with them."</p>
<p>Then one of the men spoke up in answer—a man with a seamed,
weather-beaten face and crisp grizzled hair. "Nay," said he, "our Lord
Baron is gone, and this is no quarrel of ours; here be four of us that are
wounded and three I misdoubt that are dead; why should we follow further
only to suffer more blows for no gain?" A growl of assent rose from those
that stood around, and William of Roderburg saw that nothing more was to
be done by the Trutz-Dragons that day.</p>
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