“Evie!”
Mrs. Wayne went to the door, but on
Ford’s assurance that her child had nothing
to fear from him, she paused with her hand on the knob
to look in curiosity at this wild young man, whose
doom lent him a kind of fascination. Again, for
a minute, all three were silent in the excess of their
surprise. Wayne himself sat rigid, gazing up at
the new-comer with strained eyes blurred with partial
blindness. Though slightly built and delicate,
he was not physically timid; and as the seconds went
by he was able to form an idea as to what had happened.
He himself, in view of the tumultuous sympathy displayed
by hunters and lumber-jacks with the man who passed
for their boon companion, had advised Ford’s
removal from the pretty toy prison of the county-town
to the stronger one at Plattsville. It was clear
that the prisoner had been helped to escape, either
before the change had been effected or while it was
taking place. There was nothing surprising in
that; the astonishing thing was that the fugitive
should have found his way to this house above all others.
Mrs. Wayne seemed to think so too, for it was she
who spoke first, in a tone which she tried to make
peremptory, in spite of its tremor of fear.
“What did you come here for?”
Ford looked at her for the first time - in
a blankness not without a dull element of pleasure.
It was at least two or three years since he had seen
anything so dainty - not, in fact, since his
own mother died. At all times his mind worked
slowly, so that he found nothing to reply till she
repeated her question with a show of increased severity.
“I came here for protection,” he said
then.
His hesitation and bewildered air
imparted assurance to his still astonished hosts.
“Isn’t it an odd place
in which to look for that?” Wayne asked, in an
excitement, he strove to subdue.
The question was the stimulus Ford
needed in order to get his wits into play.
“No,” he replied, slowly;
“I’ve a right to protection from the man
who sentenced me to death for a crime of which he
knows me innocent.”
Wayne concealed a start by smoothing
the newspaper over his crossed knees, but he was unable
to keep a shade of thickness out of his voice as he
answered:
“You had a fair trial.
You were found guilty. You have had the benefit
of all the resources allowed by the law. You
have no right to say I know you to be innocent.”
Wholly spent, Ford dropped into a
chair from which one of the children had risen.
With his arm hanging limply over the back he sat staring
haggardly at the judge, as though finding nothing
to say.
“I have a right to read any
man’s mind,” he muttered, after a long
pause, “when it’s as transparent as yours.
No one had any doubt as to your convictions - after
your charge.”
“That has nothing to do with
it. If I charged in your favor, it was because
I wanted you to have the benefit of every possible
plea. When those pleas were found insufficient
by a jury of your peers - ”
Ford emitted a sound that might have
been a laugh, had there been mirth in it.
“A jury of my peers! A
lot of thick-headed country tradesmen, prejudiced
against me from the start because I’d sometimes
kicked up a row in their town! They weren’t
my peers any more than they were yours!”
“The law assumes all men to be equal - ”
“Just as it assumes all men
to be intelligent - only they’re not.
The law is a very fine theory. The chief thing
to be, said against it is that five times out of ten
it leaves human nature out of account. I’m
condemned to death, not because I killed a man, but
because you lawyers won’t admit that your theory
doesn’t work.”
He began to speak more easily, with
the energy born of his desperate situation and his
sense of wrong. He sat up straighter; the air
of dejection with which he had sunk to the chair slipped
from him; his gray eyes, of the kind called “honest,”
shot out glances of protest. The elder man found
himself once more struggling against the wave of sympathy
which at times in the court-room had been almost too
strong for him. He was forced to intrench himself
mentally within the system he served before bracing
himself to reply.
“I can’t keep you from having your opinion - ”
“Nor can I save you from having
yours. Look at me, judge!” He was bolt
upright now, throwing his arms wide with a gesture
in which there was more appeal than indignation “Look
at me! I’m a strong, healthy-bodied, healthy-minded
fellow of twenty-four; but I’m drenched to the
skin, I’m half naked, I’m nearly dead
with hunger, I’m an outlaw for life - and
you’re responsible for it all.”
It was Wayne’s turn for protest,
and though he winced, he spoke sharply.
“I had my duty to perform - ”
“Good God, man, don’t
sit there and call that thing your duty! You’re
something more than a wheel in a machine. You
were a human being before you were a judge. With
your convictions you should have come down from the
bench and washed your hands of the whole affair.
The very action would have given me a chance - ”
“You mustn’t speak like
that to my husband,” Mrs. Wayne broke in, indignantly,
from the doorway. “If you only knew what
he has suffered on your account - ”
“Is it anything like what I’ve suffered
on his?”
“I dare say it’s worse.
He has scarcely slept or eaten since he knew he would
have to pass that dreadful sen - ”
“Come! come!” Wayne exclaimed,
in the impatient tone of a man who puts an end to
a useless discussion. “We can’t spend
time on this subject any longer. I’m not
on my defence - ”
“You are on your defence,”
Ford declared, instantly. “Even your wife
puts you there. We’re not in a courtroom
as we were this morning. Circumstantial evidence
means nothing to us in this isolated house, where
you’re no longer the judge, as I’m no longer
the prisoner. We’re just two naked human
beings, stripped of everything but their inborn rights - and
I claim mine.”
“Well - what are they?”
“They’re simple enough.
I claim the right to have something to eat, and to
go my way without being molested - or betrayed.
You’ll admit I’m not asking much.”
“You may have the food,”
Mrs. Wayne said, in a tone not without compassion.
“I’ll go and get it.”
For a minute or two there was no sound
but that of her cough, as she sped down a passage.
Before speaking, Wayne passed his hand across his brow
as though in an effort to clear his mental vision.
“No; you don’t seem to
be asking much. But, as a matter of fact, you’re
demanding my pledge to my country. I undertook
to administer its laws - ”
Ford sprang up.
“You’ve done it,”
he cried, “and I’m the result! You’ve
administered the law right up to its hilt, and your
duty as a judge is performed. Surely you’re
free now to think of yourself as a man and to treat
me as one.”
“I might do that, and still
think you a man dangerous to leave at large.”
“But do you?”
“That’s my affair.
Whatever your opinion of the courts that have judged
your case, I must accept their verdict.”
“In your official capacity - yes;
but not here, as host to the poor dog who comes under
your roof for shelter. My rights are sacred.
Even the wild Arab - ”
He paused abruptly. Over Wayne’s
shoulder, through the window still open to the terrace,
he saw a figure cross the darkness. Could his
pursuers be waiting outside for their chance to spring
on him? A perceptible fraction of a second went
by before he told himself he must have been mistaken.
“Even the wild Arab would think
them so,” he concluded, his glance shifting
rapidly between the judge and the window open behind
him.
“But I’m not a wild Arab,”
Wayne replied. “My first duty is toward
my country and its organized society.”
“I don’t think so.
Your first duty is toward the man you know you’ve
sentenced wrongly. Fate has shown you an unusual
mercy in giving you a chance to help him.”
“I can be sorry for the sentence
and yet feel that I could not have acted otherwise.”
“Then what are you going to do now?”
“What would you expect me to do but hand you
back to justice?”
“How?”
There was a suggestion of physical
disdain in the tone of the laconic question, as well
as in the look he fixed on the neat, middle-aged man
doing his best to be cool and collected Wayne glanced
over his shoulder toward the telephone on the wall.
Norrie Ford understood and spoke quickly:
“Yes; you could ring up the
police at Greenport, but I could strangle you before
you crossed the floor.”
“So you could; but would you?
If you did, should you be any better off? Should
you be as well off as you are now? As it is, there
is a possibility of a miscarriage of justice, of which
one day you may get the benefit. There would
be no such possibility then. You would be tracked
down within forty-eight hours.”
“Oh, you needn’t argue;
I’ve no intention - ” Once more
he paused. The same shadow had flitted across
the dark space outside, this time with a distinct
flutter of a white dress. He could only think
it was some one getting help together; and while he
went on to finish his sentence in words, all his subconscious
faculties were at work, seeking an escape from the
trap in which he was taken.
“I’ve no intention of
doing violence unless I’m driven to it - ”
“But if you are driven to it - ?”
“I’ve a right to defend
myself. Organized society, as you call it, has
put me where it has no further claim upon me.
I must fight against it single-handed - and
I’ll do it. I shall spare neither man nor
woman - nor woman” - he
raised his voice so as to be heard outside - “who
stands in my way.”
He threw back his head and looked
defiantly out into the night. As if in response
to this challenge a tall, white figure suddenly emerged
from the darkness and stood plainly before him.
It was a girl, whose movements were
curiously quick and silent, as she beckoned to him,
over the head of the judge, who sat with his back toward
her.
“Then all the more reason why
society should protect itself against you,”
Wayne began again; but Ford was no longer listening.
His attention was wholly fixed on the girl, who continued
to beckon noiselessly, fluttering for an instant close
to the threshold of the room, then withdrawing suddenly
to the very edge of the terrace, waving a white scarf
in token that he should follow her. She had repeated
her action again and again, beckoning with renewed
insistence, before he understood and made up his mind.
“I don’t say that I refuse
to help you,” Wayne was saying. “My
sympathy with you is very sincere. If I can get
your sentence commuted - In fact, a reprieve
is almost certain - ”
With a dash as lithe and sudden as
that which had brought him in, Ford was out on the
terrace, following the white dress and the waving scarf
which were already disappearing down the yew-tree
walk. The girl’s flight over grass and
gravel was like nothing so much as that of a bird skimming
through the air. Ford’s own steps crunched
loudly on the stillness of the night, so that if any
one lay in ambush he knew he could not escape.
He was prepared to hear shots come ringing from any
quarter, but he ran on with the indifference of a
soldier grown used to battle, intent on keeping up
with the shadow fleeing before him.
He followed her through the garden
gate he himself had left open, and down the lane leading
to the pasture. At the point where he had entered
it from the right, she turned to the left, keeping
away from the mountains and parallel with the lake.
There was no moon, but the night was clear; and no
sound but that of the shrill, sustained chorus of insect
life.
Beyond the pasture the lane became
nothing but a path, zigzagging up a hillside between
patches of Indian corn. The girl sped over it
so lightly that Ford would have found it hard to keep
her in sight if from time to time she had not paused
and waited. When he came near enough to see the
outlines of her form she flew on again, less like a
living woman than a mountain wraith.
From the top of the hill he could
see the dull gleam of the lake with its girdle of
lamp-lit towns. Here the woodland began again;
not the main body of the forest, but one of its long
arms, thrust down over hill and valley, twisting its
way in among villages and farm lands. That which
had been a path now become a trail, along which the
girl flitted with the ease of habit and familiarity.
In the concentration of his effort
to keep the moving white spot in view Ford lost count
of time. Similarly he had little notion of the
distance they were covering. He guessed that
they had been ten or fifteen minutes on the way, and
that they might have gone a mile, when, after waiting
for him to come almost near enough to speak to her,
she began moving in a direction at an acute angle
to that by which they had come. At the same time
he perceived that they were on the side of a low wooded
mountain and that they were beating their way round
it.
All at once they emerged on a tiny
clearing - a grassy ledge on the slope.
Through the starlight he could see the hillside break
away steeply into a vaporous gorge, while above him
the mountain raised a black dome amid the serried
points of the sky-line. The dryad-like creature
beckoned him forward with her scarf, until suddenly
she stopped with the decisive pause of one who has
reached her goal. Coming up with her, he saw her
unlock the door of a small cabin, which had hitherto
not detached itself from the surrounding darkness.
“Go in,” she whispered.
“Don’t strike a light. There are biscuits
somewhere, in a box. Grope for them. There’s
a couch in a corner.”
Without allowing him to speak, she
forced him gently over the threshold and closed the
door upon him. Standing inside in the darkness,
he heard the grating of her key in the lock, and the
rustle of her skirts as she sped away.