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"And exposed to sore temptation to peach on me! Couldn't help it, lads!
Couldn't help it! I waited until I could do something to the purpose!"
"Now, may Satan roast me alive if I know what you have done to turn yourself into an old man! Burn my soul, if I should know you now, captain, if it wa'n't for your voice," grumbled Steve.
"Listen, then, you ungrateful, suspicious wretches! I did for you what no captain ever did for his men before! I had exhausted all manner of disguises, so that the authorities would almost have looked for me in an old woman's gown! See, then, what I did! I put myself on a month's regimen of vegetable diet, and kept myself in a cavern until I grew as pale and thin as a hermit! Then I shaved off my hair, beard, mustaches and eyebrows! Yes, blame you, I sacrificed all my beauty to your interests! Fate helps those who help themselves! The camp meeting gathering together hosts of people and preachers gave me the opportunity of appearing without exciting inquiry. I put on a gray wig, a black suit, a.s.sumed a feeble voice, stooping gait and a devout manner, and--became a popular preacher at the camp meeting."
"Captain, you're a brick! You are indeed! I do not flatter you!" said Hal. It was a sentiment in which all agreed.
"I had no need of further machination!" continued the captain; "they actually gave me the game! I was urged to visit you here--forced to remain alone and talk with you!" laughed Black Donald.
"And now, captain, my jewel, my treasure, my sweetheart--that I love with 'a love pa.s.sing the love of woman'--how is your reverence going to get us out?"
"Listen!" said the captain, diving into his pockets, "you must get yourselves out! This prison is by no means strongly fastened or well guarded! Here are files to file off your fetters! Here are tools to pick the locks, and here are three loaded revolvers to use against any of the turnkey who might discover and attempt to stop you! To-night, however, is the last of the camp meeting, and the two turnkeys are among my hearers! I shall keep them all night! Now you know what to do! I must leave you! d.i.c.k, try to make an a.s.sault on me that I may scream, but first conceal your tools and arms!"
Hal hid the instruments and d.i.c.k, with an awful roar, sprang at the visitor, who ran to the grating crying:
"Help--help!"
The warden came hurrying to the spot.
"Take 'im out o' this, then!" muttered d.i.c.k, sulkily getting back into his corner.
"Oh, what a wretch!" said Mrs. Condiment.
"I shall be glad when he's once hanged!" said the jailer.
"I--I--fear that I can do them but little good, and--and I would rather not come again, being sickly and nervous," faltered Father Gray.
"No, my dear good sir! I for one shall not ask you to risk your precious health for such a set of wretches! They are Satan's own! You shall come home to our tent and lie down to rest, and I will make you an egg-caudle that will set you up again," said Mrs. Condiment, tenderly, as the whole party left the cell.
That day the outrageous conduct of the imprisoned burglars was the subject of conversation, even dividing the interest of the religious excitement.
But the next morning the whole community was thrown into a state of consternation by the discovery that the burglars had broken jail and fled, and that the notorious outlaw Black Donald had been in their very midst, disguised as an elderly field preacher.
CHAPTER XXIX.
THE VICTORY OVER DEATH.
"Glory to G.o.d! to G.o.d!" he saith, "Knowledge by suffering entereth, And life is perfected in death."
--E. B. Browning.
One morning, in the gladness of his heart, Doctor Day mounted his horse and rode down to Staunton, gayly refusing to impart the object of his ride to any one, and bidding Traverse stay with the women until he should return.
As soon as the doctor was gone, Traverse went into the library to arrange his patron's books and papers.
Mrs. Rocke and Clara hurried away to attend to some little mystery of their own invention for the surprise and delight of the doctor and Traverse. For the more secret accomplishment of their purpose, they had dismissed all attendance, and were at work alone in Mrs. Rocke's room.
And here Clara's sweet, frank and humble disposition was again manifest, for when Marah would arise from her seat to get anything, Clara would forestall her purpose and say:
"Tell me--tell me to get what you want--just as if I were your child, and you will make me feel so well--do, now!"
"You are very good, dear Miss Clara, but--I would rather not presume to ask you to wait on me," said Marah, gravely.
"Presume! What a word from you to me! Please don't use it ever again, nor call me Miss Clara. Call me 'Clara' or 'child'--do, mamma," said the doctor's daughter, then suddenly pausing, she blushed and was silent.
Marah gently took her hand and drew her into a warm embrace.
It was while the friends were conversing so kindly in Marah's room, and while Traverse was still engaged in arranging the doctor's books and papers that one of the men-servants rapped at the library door, and without waiting permission to come in, entered the room with every mark of terror in his look and manner.
"What is the matter?" inquired Traverse, anxiously rising.
"Oh, Mr. Traverse, sir, the doctor's horse has just rushed home to the stables all in foam, without his rider!"
"Good heaven!" exclaimed Traverse, starting up and seizing his hat.
"Follow me immediately! Hurry to the stables and saddle my horse and bring him up instantly! We must follow on the road the doctor took to see what has happened! Stay! On your life, breathe not a word of what has occurred! I would not have Miss Day alarmed for the world!" he concluded, hastening down-stairs attended by the servant.
In five minutes from the time he left the library Traverse was in the saddle, galloping toward Staunton, and looking attentively along the road as he went. Alas! he had not gone far, when, in descending the wooded hill, he saw lying doubled up helplessly on the right side of the path, the body of the good doctor!
With an exclamation between a groan and a cry of anguish, Traverse threw himself from his saddle and kneeled beside the fallen figure, gazing in an agony of anxiety upon the closed eyes, pale features and contracted form and crying:
"Oh, heaven have mercy! Doctor Day, oh, Doctor Day! Can you speak to me?"
The white and quivering eyelids opened and the faltering tongue spoke:
"Traverse--get me home--that I may see--Clara before I die!"
"Oh, must this be so! Must this be so! Oh, that I could die for you, my friend! My dear, dear friend!" cried Traverse, wringing his hands in such anguish as he had never known before.
Then feeling the need of self-control and the absolute necessity of removing the sufferer, Traverse repressed the swelling flood of sorrow in his bosom and cast about for the means of conveying the doctor to his house. He dreaded to leave him for an instant, and yet it was necessary to do so, as the servant whom he had ordered to follow him had not yet come up.
While he was bathing the doctor's face with water from a little stream beside the path, John, the groom, came riding along, and seeing his fallen master, with an exclamation of horror, sprang from his saddle and ran to the spot.
"John," said Traverse, in a heart-broken tone, "mount again and ride for your life to the house! Have--a cart--yes--that will be the easiest conveyance--have a cart got ready instantly with a feather bed placed in it, and the gentlest horse harnessed to it, and drive it here to the roadside at the head of this path! Hasten for your life! Say not a word of what has happened lest it should terrify the ladies! Quick! quick! on your life!"
Again, as the man was hurrying away, the doctor spoke, faintly murmuring:
"For heaven's sake, do not let poor Clara be shocked!"
"No--no--she shall not be! I warned him, dear friend! How do you feel?
Can you tell where you are hurt?"
The doctor feebly moved one hand to his chest and whispered:
"There, and in my back."
Traverse, controlling his own great mental agony, did all that he could to soothe and alleviate the sufferings of the doctor, until the arrival of the cart, that stopped on the road at the head of the little bridle path, where the accident happened. Then John jumped from the driver's seat and came to the spot, where he tenderly a.s.sisted the young man in raising the doctor and conveying him to the cart and laying him upon the bed. Notwithstanding all their tender care in lifting and carrying him, it was but too evident that he suffered greatly in being moved. Slowly as they proceeded, at every jolt of the cart, his corrugated brows and blanched and quivering lips told how much agony he silently endured.