His superhuman calm had an effect upon him.
In vain, appealing to his reason, did he tell himself that in so unequal a combat all the advantages were on his side.
The immobility of the blind man froze him.
He had settled on the place where he would strike his victim. He had fixed upon it!
What, then, hindered him from putting an end to his blind antagonist?
At last, with a spring he drove his sword full at Michael’s breast.
An imperceptible movement of the blind man’s knife turned aside the blow.
Michael had not been touched, and coolly he awaited a second attack.
Cold drops stood on Ogareff’s brow.
He drew back a step, then again leaped forward.
But as had the first, this second attempt failed.
The knife had simply parried the blow from the traitor’s useless sword.
Mad with rage and terror before this living statue, he gazed into the wide-open eyes of the blind man.
Those eyes which seemed to pierce to the bottom of his soul, and yet which did not, could not, see—exercised a sort of dreadful fascination over him.
All at once, Ogareff uttered a cry.
A sudden light flashed across his brain.
“He sees!” he exclaimed, “he sees!”
And like a wild beast trying to retreat into its den, step by step, terrified, he drew back to the end of the room.
Then the statue became animated, the blind man walked straight up to Ivan Ogareff, and placing himself right before him,
“Yes, I see!” said he.
“I see the mark of the knout which I gave you, traitor and coward!
I see the place where I am about to strike you!
Defend your life!
It is a duel I deign to offer you!
My knife against your sword!” “He sees!” said Nadia. “Gracious Heaven, is it possible!”
Ogareff felt that he was lost.
But mustering all his courage, he sprang forward on his impassible adversary.
The two blades crossed, but at a touch from Michael’s knife, wielded in the hand of the Siberian hunter, the sword flew in splinters, and the wretch, stabbed to the heart, fell lifeless on the ground.
At the same moment, the door was thrown open.
The Grand Duke, accompanied by some of his officers, appeared on the threshold.
The Grand Duke advanced.
In the body lying on the ground, he recognized the man whom he believed to be the Czar’s courier.
Then, in a threatening voice, “Who killed that man?” he asked.
“I,” replied Michael.
One of the officers put a pistol to his temple, ready to fire.
“Your name?” asked the Grand Duke, before giving the order for his brains to be blown out.
“Your Highness,” answered Michael, “ask me rather the name of the man who lies at your feet!”
“That man, I know him!
He is a servant of my brother!
He is the Czar’s courier!”
“That man, your Highness, is not a courier of the Czar!
He is Ivan Ogareff!”
“Ivan Ogareff!” exclaimed the Grand Duke.
“Yes, Ivan the Traitor!”
“But who are you, then?”
“Michael Strogoff!”
CHAPTER XV CONCLUSION
MICHAEL STROGOFF was not, had never been, blind.
A purely human phenomenon, at the same time moral and physical, had neutralized the action of the incandescent blade which Feofar’s executioner had passed before his eyes.
It may be remembered, that at the moment of the execution, Marfa Strogoff was present, stretching out her hands towards her son.