The old landlord winced. "No, not to the churchyard," he exhorted them. "In the first place, the ground is sacred; and in the second, you might miss him there. If you really wish to settle matters quietly with him once for all--I'm not supposed to know what you have against him, and don't wish to know--well, my advice to you is to go to the Cats' Bridge. Just there, you know, the bank is wooded--not thickly, certainly, but thick enough for you to hide behind."
"But suppose he returned by way of the village and the drawbridge?" put in the cautious trooper again.
Herr Merckel knew better. "Not he!" he laughed. "The Cats' Bridge is handier."
"Let's be off, then, to the Cats' Bridge," yelled the carpenter, bumping the butt-end of his gun against the chairs and tables. There was a general stampede. Herr Merckel crammed bottles of schnaps into as many pockets as he could catch hold of, as his customers hurried out.
"Take it, friends," he cried, "and welcome! Defend your honour--defend your honour!"
Then, when the last had gone, he mopped his perspiring brow, and folding his hands, exclaimed with an uneasy sigh--
"Ah, Amalie, if only they don't offer him violence!"
CHAPTER XVIII
On reaching the highroad Boleslav saw the figure of a girl come out from the shadow of the churchyard yews, and advance to meet him with hesitating footsteps.
The moment to which he had looked forward with tender yearning for eight years had come at last, yet his heart beat no quicker. "You ought to be pleased; congratulate yourself," he said inwardly. "She loves you! She saved you ... has freed you from Regina." And something echoed sadly within him, "From Regina!"