Suddenly one of the men near Frank made a move and the lad half drew his revolver. The man simply produced a handkerchief, however, and wiped beads of perspiration from his brow. Frank thrust his revolver back in his pocket, but kept his hand upon it.
The Czar, riding slowly, drew near to where Jack and the other two conspirators stood. Then it was that Jack recognized that he was the one who held the Czar’s life in his hands.
The conspirator to his left thrust his hand under his coat and drew forth a round dark object, which he concealed from the crowd. Jack’s sharp eyes had seen the move, but he did not act yet.
Now the Czar was directly abreast them, not more than a hundred feet away.
Slowly the conspirator drew back his hand, and in another instant would have hurled the bomb upon the Czar; but at that moment Jack came to life.
As the man drew back his arm, Jack stepped quickly forward, and, seizing the upraised hand in both his, wrenched the arm violently. The man staggered back with a cry of pain, and dropped the bomb.
But before it could touch the ground, where it would undoubtedly have exploded, killing and maiming many, Jack slipped one hand beneath it and caught it gently.
Then the two thwarted conspirators sprang upon him.
There seemed to be no one in the crowd who had perceived the cause of Jack’s struggle with the two men, and the latter, taking advantage of this fact, struggled fiercely with Jack, uttering loud cries of “Assassin!” “Kill him!” “He tried to assassinate the Czar!”
With his one free hand, Jack fought desperately, but the crowd, attracted by the cries of the two conspirators, closed in on him angrily. Some one wrenched the bomb from his hand, and other hands clawed and struck at his face and body.