Holt had been carried on with the motion of the crowd. When he dealt the blow to the fellow in the car, he was beside himself with rage. The genuine furor teutonicus had taken possession of him so irresistibly and so bewilderingly as to leave him utterly without any of the calm judgment necessary to measure the situation. After his first adventure, he had submitted to be handcuffed, and had watched the struggle between Forchhaem and his own comrades in a sort of absence of mind. He had stood perfectly quiet, his face had become pale, and his eyes looked about strangely. The excitement of passion was now beginning to wear off. He felt the cold iron of the manacles around his wrists, his eyes glared, his face became crimson, the sinews of his powerful arm stiffened, and with one great muscular convulsion he wrenched off the handcuffs. Nobody had observed this sudden action, all eyes being directed to the combatants. Shoving the part of the handcuff which still hung to his wrist under the sleeve of his jacket, Holt disappeared through the crowd.
The resistance of the peasants was gradually becoming fainter. At length they succumbed to overpowering force, and were handcuffed.
"Where is the third one?" cried Seicht. "There were three of them."
"Where is the third one? There were three of them," was echoed on every hand, and all eyes sought for the missing one in the crowd.
"The third one has run away, sir," reported Forchhaem.
"What's his name?" asked Seicht.
Nobody knew.
A street boy, looking up at the official, ingenuously cried, "'Twas a Tartar."
Seicht looked down upon the obstreperous little informant.
"A Tartar--do you know him?"