"A Christian!" said Goritz. "Incredible!"
"You shall see," said the Effendi. And turning to those within he uttered a phrase in Turkish, and presently Zubeydeh and a man came forward dragging something behind them. Marishka hid her face in her hands, and crouched nearer the corner where the armor was.
She saw Goritz suddenly start forward, his gaze upon the prostrate figure in black, which its bearers had deposited none too gently in the middle of the rug. Then he peered into the upturned face, starting upright and glaring at the Effendi.
"_Vermalerdeiter Hallen_----" he cried. "_It's not the man!_"
"What do you mean, Excellency?" cried the Beg.
"What I say--Idiots!"
"A Christian--in my Harim!" wailed the old ruffian. "He has ruined my furniture and killed my brother-in-law and my cousin."
"What do I care?" cried Goritz furiously. "You've got us all into trouble with your bungling. Do you know who this man is?" he stormed.
"Who, Excellency?" cried the Effendi.
"Nicholas Szarvas--the most famous secret service agent in Hungary."
"What say you, Excellency?" the Effendi asked bewildered.
"You have heard."
"It is impossible. This was the man----"
"Bah! You are a sheep's head."
"Sheep's head I am not----"
"Then you are a fool!"
"By the beard of the Prophet--he was in my Harim," muttered the Effendi.
"I call you all to witness----"
"I wash my hands of the matter," said Goritz furiously.
"I am within my rights--the Harim----"
"Bah--You have killed a police officer of the Empire!"
"And you?" The Effendi's face was the color of that of the man upon the floor, but his eyes glowed with fear and desperation.
"I know nothing of the matter," continued Goritz. "A Christian comes into your Harim and you kill him. If he turns out to be an officer of the law, what is it to me?"
"You will pay me that which you owe," shrieked the Effendi. "The man has broken my furniture."
"It is a pity he didn't break your head. I pay you nothing."
And then to Marishka, "Come, Countess, we must be upon our way."
Marishka stood staring at Goritz, a new horror in her eyes. She now understood. The Effendi thrust himself between them.
"You will pay me that which you owe," he stormed again.
"Stand aside!" said the German, and then to Marishka,
"If the Countess Strahni will be good enough to accompany me?" he said, civilly.
But Marishka stood fixed, staring at him with alien eyes, as the Effendi rushed forward toward her, his arms extended.
"She shall not go. She will see what has been done. He is _not the man_.
She will remain here in my house until----"
"Stand aside, Effendi!" cried Goritz furiously, and as the man did not move, he caught him by the shoulder and thrust him roughly aside. He scorned to use a weapon, and the other man and the woman seemed completely dominated by his air of command.
"You will please come at once, Countess Strahni. There is no telling how soon the police will be coming."
And as Marishka did not move--
"You heard?"
"I will not go," stammered Marishka.
Goritz paused, examining her keenly, as though he had not quite understood.
"I have asked you quite courteously, Countess----"
"I will not go," repeated Marishka. Her voice was ice-cold, like her body, which seemed to be frozen into immobility.
"I beg to remind you of your promise--to go with me----"
"I will not go," she said again.
"Then I must take you," he said, striding toward her furiously, and reaching out a hand to seize her by the wrist.
Then a strange thing happened. The man in armor, in the corner behind Marishka, strode clanking forth into the room, while a voice reverberated in the iron helmet. What it said no one understood. The Effendi gazed at the moving thing in terror, and then with a shriek fled down the stairs, Zubeydeh and her companion, _calling in loud tones upon Allah_, at his heels. Goritz glanced at the thing and then stood irresolute a moment, as the man in the armor slowly raised an arm, for at the end of the arm Goritz saw a revolver pointed directly at him.
"Hold up your hands, Captain Goritz," rang the voice from the depths of the helmet. "Quickly, or I'll shoot."
Goritz bit his lips.
"Clever--Herr Renwick," he said coolly in English. "You've taken the trick."
"Hold up your hands----"
But Goritz with a sudden leap had sprung behind Marishka. Renwick fired once as he jumped, and missed. And now Goritz, shielding himself behind Marishka's body, drew his automatic and fired again and again, riddling the ancient armor like a sieve. Marishka struggled wildly in the arms of the German, and managed to draw the dagger concealed in her waist, but he caught her wrist and held her in front of him, taking careful aim at the man in the armor and firing deliberately. Renwick tottered forward silently and came crashing to the floor in the corner, where after a moment of struggle, he relaxed and lay motionless.
Goritz caught Marishka around the waist and disarmed her. But this act of precaution was unnecessary, for after one fleeting glance at the tangled heap of iron in the corner, she sank a dead weight in his arms.