Then open went the door. I saw our fellows turn round, and, sword in hand and feeling as if I was going to my death, I dashed right at the three men guarding the back, shouting “Hurrah!” at the top of my voice.

I felt sure that they would run me through, but my father was right. One ran to the left, another to the right, and the other straight on up the steep slope, and, as I cut at him desperately, down he went untouched, save by a stone over which he tripped, and we all went over him as we rushed up the valley side to the shelter of the rocks, and with the enemy swarming out and after us.

It was rough work, but we knew our way. The enemy were strange, and before we had toiled up a hundred yards they began to tail off. In another hundred we were some way up, and panting behind a clump of rocks that formed quite a little fort, while below us we could see the enemy gathered together in a group, and evidently about to return.


Chapter Forty.

After the Fight.

“Let’s get breath first,” said my father. “Sit down, my lads, anywhere. How many are we? Only six all told? Who’s hurt?”

“Oh, I’m all right, captain,” said the foreman; “only a bit of a cut.”

“Only a bit of a cut!” said my father. “Here, hold your arm.” My father drew out a bandage from his pocket, and tied up the foreman’s arm, and he had no sooner done this than another man offered himself to be bandaged.