The voice-the condemning
words-followed Nathaniel as he staggered
on between his two guards; it haunted him still as
the cold chill of the rotting dungeon walls struck
in his face; it remained with him as he stood swaying
alone in the thick gloom-the voice rumbling
in his ears, the words beating against his brain until
the shock of them sickened him, until he stretched
out his arms and there fell from him such a cry as
had never tortured his lips before.
Strang was alive! He had left
the spark of life in him, and the woman who loved
him had fanned it back into full flame.
Strang was alive! And Marion-Marion
was his wife!
The voice of the king taunted him
from the black chaos that hid the dungeon walls.
The words struck at him, filling his head with shooting
pain, and he tottered back and sank to the ground to
get away from them. They followed, and that vengeful
leer of the king was behind them, urging them on,
until they beat his face into the sticky earth, and
smothered him into what he thought was death.
There came rest after that, a long
silent rest. When Nathaniel slowly climbed up
out of the ebon shadows again the first consciousness
that came to him was that the word-demons had stopped
their beating against his brain and that he no longer
heard the voice of the king. His relief was so
great that he breathed a restful sigh. Something
touched him then. Great God! were they coming
back? Were they still there-waiting-waiting-
It was a wonderfully familiar voice that spoke to
him.
“Hello there, Nat! Want a drink?”
He gulped eagerly at the cool liquid that touched
his lips.
“Neil,” he whispered.
“It’s me, Nat. They chucked me in
with you. Hell’s hole, isn’t it?”
Nathaniel sat up, Neil’s strong
arm at his back. There was a light in the room
now and he could see his companion’s face, smiling
at him encouragingly. The sight of it was like
an elixir to him. He drank again and new life
coursed through him.
“Yes-hell of a hole!”
he repeated drowsily. “Sorry for you-Neil-”
and he seemed to sleep again.
Neil laughed as he wiped his companion’s face
with a wet cloth.
“I’m used to it, Nat.
Been here before,” he said. “Can you
get up? There’s a bench over here-not
long enough to stretch you out on or I would have
made you a bed of it, but it’s better than this
mud to sit on.”
He put his arms about Nathaniel and
helped him to his feet. For a few moments the
wounded man stood without moving.
“I’m not very bad, I guess,”
he said, taking a slow step. “Where is the
seat, Neil? I’m going to walk to it.
What sort of a bump have I got on the head?”
“Nothing much,” assured
Neil. “Suspicious, though,” he grinned
cheerfully. “Looks as though you were running
and somebody came up and tapped you from behind!”
Nathaniel’s strength returned
to him quickly. The pain had gone from his head
and his eyes no longer hurt him. In the dim candle-light
he could distinguish the four walls of the dungeon,
glistening with the water and mold that reeked from
between their rotting logs. The floor was of wet,
sticky earth which clung to his boots, and the air
that he breathed filled his nostrils and throat with
the uncomfortable thickness of a night fog at sea.
Through it the candle burned in a misty halo.
Near the candle, which stood on a shelf-like table
against one of the walls, was a big dish which caught
Nathaniel’s eyes.
“What’s that?” he asked pointing
toward it.
“Grub,” replied Neil. “Hungry?”
He went to the table and got the plate
of food. There were chunks of boiled meat, unbuttered
bread, and cold potatoes. For several minutes
they ate in silence. Now that Nathaniel was himself
again Neil could no longer keep up his forced spirits.
Both realized that they had played their game and
that it had ended in defeat. And each believed
that it was in his individual power to alleviate to
some extent the other’s misery. To Neil
what was ahead of them held no mystery. A few
hours more and then-death. It was
only the form in which it would come that troubled
him, that made him think. Usually the victims
of this dungeon cell were shot. Sometimes they
were hanged. But why tell Nathaniel? So
he ate his meat and bread without words, waiting for
the other to speak, as the other waited for him.
And Nathaniel, on his part, kept to himself the secret
of Marion’s fate. After they had done with
the meat and the bread and the cold potatoes he pulled
out his beloved pipe and filled it with the last scraps
of his tobacco, and as the fumes of it clouded round
his head, soothing him in its old friendship, he told
of his fight with Strang and his killing of Arbor
Croche.
“I’m glad for Winnsome’s
sake,” said Neil, after a moment. “Oh,
if you’d only killed Strang!”
Nathaniel thought of what Marion had
said to him in the forest.
“Neil,” he said quietly,
“do you know that Winnsome loves you-not
as the little girl whom you toted about on your shoulders-but
as a woman? Do you know that?” In the other’s
silence he added, “When I last saw Marion she
sent this message to you-’Tell Neil
that he must go, for Winnsome’s sake. Tell
him that her fate is shortly to be as cruel as mine-tell
him that Winnsome loves him and that she will escape
and come to him on the mainland.’” Like
words of fire they had burned themselves in his brain
and as Nathaniel repeated them he thought of that other
broken heart that had sobbed out its anguish to him
in the castle chamber. “Neil, a man can
die easier when he knows that a woman loves him!”
He had risen to his feet and was walking
back and forth through the thick gloom.
“I’m glad!” Neil’s
voice came to him softly, as though he scarcely dared
to speak the words aloud. After a moment he added,
“Have you got a pencil, Nat? I would like
to leave a little note for Winnsome.”
Nathaniel found both pencil and paper
in one of his pockets and Neil dropped upon his knees
in the mud beside the table. Ten minutes later
he turned to Nathaniel and a great change had come
into his face.
“She always seemed like such
a little child to me that I never dared-to-tell
her,” he faltered. “I’ve done
it in this.”
“How will you get the note to her?”
“I know the jailer. Perhaps
when he comes to bring us our dinner I can persuade
him to send it to her.”
Nathaniel thrust his hands into his
pockets. His fingers dug into Obadiah’s
gold.
“Would this help?” he asked.
He brought out a shimmering handful
of it and counted the pieces upon the table.
“Two hundred dollars-if
he will deliver that note,” he said.
Neil stared at him in amazement.
“If he won’t take it for that-I’ve
got more. I’ll go a thousand!”
Neil stood silent, wondering if his
companion was mad. Nathaniel saw the look in
his face and his own flushed with sudden excitement.
“Don’t you understand?”
he cried. “That note means Heaven or hell
for Winnsome-it means life-her
whole future! And you know what this cell means
for us,” he said more calmly. “It
means that we’re at the end of our rope, that
the game is up, that neither of us will ever see Marion
or Winnsome again. That note is the last word
in life from us-from you. It’s
a dying prayer. Tell Winnsome your love, tell
her that it is your last wish that she go out into
the big, free world-away from this hell-hole,
away from Strang, away from the Mormons, and live as
other women live! And commanded by your love-she
will go!”
“I’ve told her that!” breathed Neil.
“I knew you would!”
Nathaniel threw another handful of gold on the table.
“Five hundred!” he exclaimed. “It’s
cheap enough for a woman’s soul!”
He motioned for Neil to put the money
in his pocket. The pain was coming back into
his head, he grew dizzy, and hastened to the bench.
Neil came and sat beside him.
“So you think it’s the
end?” he asked. He was glad that his companion
had guessed the truth.
“Don’t you?”
“Yes.”
There was a minute’s dark silence.
The ticking of Nathaniel’s watch sounded like
the tapping of a stick.
“What will happen?”
“I don’t know. But
whatever it may be it will come to us soon. Usually
it happens at night.”
“There is no hope?”
“Absolutely none. The whole
mainland is at the mercy of Strang. He fears
no retribution now, no punishment for his crimes, no
hand stronger than his own. He will not even
give us the pretense of a hearing. I am a traitor,
a revolutionist-you have attempted the life
of the king. We are both condemned-both
doomed.”
Neil spoke calmly and his companion
strove to master the terrible pain at his heart as
he thought of Marion. If Neil could go to the
end like a martyr he would at least make an attempt
to do as much. Yet he could not help from saying:
“What will become of Marion?”
He felt the tremor that passed through his companion’s
body.
“I have implored Winnsome to
do all that she can to get her away,” replied
Neil. “If Marion won’t go-”
He clenched his hands with a moaning curse and sprang
to his feet, again pacing back and forth through the
gloomy dungeon. “If she won’t go I
swear that Strang’s triumph will be short!”
he cried suddenly. “I can not guess the
terrible power that the king possesses over her, but
I know that once his wife she will not endure it long.
The moment she becomes that, her bondage is broken.
I know it. I have seen it in her eyes. She
will kill herself!”
Nathaniel rose slowly from the bench and came to his
side.
“She won’t do that!” he groaned.
“My God-she won’t do that!”
Neil’s face was blanched to the whiteness of
paper.
“She will,” he repeated
quietly. “Her terrible pact with Strang
will have been fulfilled. And I-I
am glad-glad-”
He raised his arms to the dripping
blackness of the dungeon ceiling, his voice shaking
with a cold, stifled anguish. Nathaniel drew back
from that tall, straight figure, step by step, as
though to hide beyond the flickering candle glow the
betrayal that had come into his face, the blazing
fire that seemed burning out his eyes. If what
Neil had said was true-
Something choked him as he dropped alone upon the
bench.
If it was true-Marion was dead!
He dropped his head in his hands and
sat for a long time in silence, listening to Neil
as he walked tirelessly over the muddy earth.
Not until there came a rattling of the chain at the
cell door and a creaking of the rusty hinges did he
lift his face. It was the jailer with a huge
armful of straw. He saw Neil approach him after
he had thrown it down. Their low voices came
to him in an indistinct murmur. After a little
he caught the sound of the chinking gold pieces.
Neil came and sat down beside him
as the heavy door closed upon them again.
“He took it,” he whispered
exultantly. “He will deliver it this morning.
If possible he will bring us an answer. I kept
out a hundred and told him that a reply would be worth
that to him.”
Nathaniel did not speak, and after
a moment’s silence Neil continued.
“The jury is assembling.
We will know our fate very soon.”
He rose to his feet, his words quivering
with nervous excitement, and Nathaniel heard him kicking
about in the straw. In another breath his voice
hissed through the gloom in a sharp, startled command:
“Good God, Nat, come here!”
Something in the strange fierceness
of Neil’s words startled Nathaniel, like the
thrilling twinges of an electric shock. He darted
across the cell and found Marion’s brother with
his shoulder against the door.
“It’s open!” he whispered.
“The door-is-open!”
The hinges creaked under his weight.
A current of air struck them in the face. Another
instant and they stood in the corridor, listening,
crushing back the breath in their lungs, not daring
to speak. Only the drip of water came to their
ears. Gently Neil drew his companion back into
the cell.
“There’s a chance-one
chance in ten thousand!” he whispered. “At
the end of this corridor there is a door-the
jailer’s door. If that’s not locked,
we can make a run for it! I’d rather die
fighting-than here!”
He slipped out again, pressing Nathaniel back.
“Wait for me!”
Nathaniel heard him stealing slowly
through the blackness. A minute later he returned.
“Locked!” he exclaimed.
In the opposite direction a ray of light caught Nathaniel’s
eye.
“Where does that light come from?” he
asked.
“Through a hole about as big
as your two hands. It was made for a stove pipe.
If we were up there we could see into the jury room.”
They moved quietly down the corridor
until they stood under the aperture, which was four
or five feet above their heads. Through it they
could hear the sound of voices but could not distinguish
the words that were being spoken.
“The jury,” explained
Neil. “They’re in a devil of a hurry!
I wonder why?”
Nathaniel could feel his companion
shrug himself in the darkness.
“Lord-for my revolver!”
he whispered excitedly. “One shot through
that hole would be worth a thousand notes to the girls!”
He caught Marion’s brother by the arm as a voice
louder than the others came to them.
“Strang!”
“Yes-the-king!”
affirmed Neil laying an expostulating hand on him.
“Hush!”
“I would like to see-”
Even in these last hours of failure
and defeat the fire of adventure flamed up in Nathaniel’s
blood. He felt his nerves leaping again to action,
his arms grew tense with new ambition-almost
he forgot that death had him cornered and was already
preparing to strike him down. Another thought
replaced all fear of this. A few feet beyond that
log wall were gathered the men whose bloodthirsty
deeds had written for them one of the reddest pages
in history-men who had burned their souls
out in the destruction of human lives, whose passions
and loves and hatreds carried with them life and death;
men who had bathed themselves in blood and lived in
blood until the people of the mainland called them
“the leeches.”
“The Mormon jury!” Nathaniel
spoke the words scarcely above his breath.
“I’d like to take a look
through that hole, Neil,” he added.
“Easy enough-if you
keep quiet. Here!” He doubled himself against
the wall. “Climb up on my shoulders.”
No sooner had Nathaniel’s face
come to a level with the hole than a soft cry of astonishment
escaped him. Neil whispered hoarsely but he did
not reply. He was looking into a room twice as
large as the dungeon cell and lighted by narrow windows
whose lower panes were on a level with the ground
outside. At the farther end of the room, in full
view, was a platform raised several feet from the
main floor. On this platform were seated ten
men, immovable as statues, every face gazing straight
ahead. Directly in front of them, on the lower
floor, stood the Mormon king, and at his side, partly
held in the embrace of one of his arms was Winnsome!
Strang’s voice came to him in
a low, solemn monotone, its rumbling depth drowning
the words he was speaking, and as Nathaniel saw him
lift his arm from about the girl’s shoulders
and place his great hand upon her head he dug his
own fingers fiercely into the rotting logs and an
imprecation burned in his breath. He did not need
to hear what the king was saying. It was a pantomime
in which every gesture was understandable. But
even Neil, huddled against the wall, heard the last
words of the prophet as they thundered forth in sudden
passion.
“Winnsome Croche demands the
death of her father’s murderer!”
Nathaniel felt his companion’s
shoulders sinking under his weight and he leaped quickly
to the floor.
“Winnsome is there!” he
panted desperately. “Do you want to see
her?”
Neil hesitated.
“No. Your boots gouge my shoulder.
Take them off.”
The scene had changed when Nathaniel
took his position again. The jury had left its
platform and was filing through a small door.
Winnsome and the king were along.
The girl had turned from him.
She was deathly pale and yet she was wondrously beautiful,
so beautiful that Nathaniel’s breath came in
quick dread as the king approached her. He could
see the triumph in his eyes, a terrible eagerness
in his face. He seized Winnsome’s hand and
spoke to her in a soft, low voice, so low that it
came to Nathaniel only in a murmur. Then, in
a moment, he began stroking the shimmering glory of
her hair, caressing the silken curls between his fingers
until the blood seemed as if it must burst, like hot
sweat from Nathaniel’s face. Suddenly Winnsome
drew back from him, the pallor gone from her face,
her eyes blazing like angry stars. She had retreated
but a step when the prophet sprang to her and caught
her in his arms, straining her to him until the scream
on her lips was choked to a gasping cry. In answer
to that cry a yell of rage hurled itself from Nathaniel’s
throat.
“Stop, you hell-hound!” he cried threateningly.
“Stop!”
He shrieked the words again and again,
maddened beyond control, and the Mormon king, whose
self-possession was more that of devil than man, still
held the struggling girl in his arms as he turned his
head toward the voice and saw Nathaniel’s long
arm and knotted fist threatening him through the hole
in the wall. Then Neil’s name in a piercing
scream resounded through the dungeon corridor and
in response to it the man under Nathaniel straightened
himself so quickly that his companion fell back to
the floor.
“Great God! what is the matter, Nat? Quick!
let me up!”
Nathaniel staggered to his feet, the
breath half gone out of his body, and in another instant
Neil was at the opening. The great room into
which he looked was empty.
“What was it?” he cried,
leaping down. “What were they doing with
Winnsome?”
“It was the king,” said
Nathaniel, struggling to master himself. “The
king put his arms around Winnsome and-she
struck him!”
“That was all?”
“He kissed her as she fought-and
I yelled.”
“She struck him!” Neil
cried. “God bless little Winnsome, Nat!
and-God bless her!”
Neil’s breath came fast as he caught the other’s
hand.
“I’d give my life if I could help you-and
Marion!”
“We’ll give them together,”
said Nathaniel coolly, turning down the corridor.
“Here’s our chance. They’ll
come through that door to relock us in our cell.
Shall we die fighting?”
He was groping about in the mud of the floor for some
object.
“If we had a couple of stones-”
“It would be madness-worse
than madness!” interposed Neil, steadying himself.
“There will be a dozen rifles at that door when
they open it. We must return to the cell.
It is worth dying a harder death to hear from Marion
and Winnsome. And we will hear from them before
night!”
They retreated into the dungeon.
A few minutes later the door opened cautiously at
the head of the corridor. A light blazed through
the blackness and after an interval of silence the
jailer made his appearance in front of the cell, a
pistol in his hand.
“Don’t be afraid, Jeekum,”
said Neil reassuringly. “You forgot the
door and we’ve been having a little fun with
the jury. That’s all!”
The nervous whiteness left Jeekum’s
face at this cheerful report and he was about to close
the door when Nathaniel exhibited a handful of gold
pieces in the candle-light and frantically beckoned
the man to come in. The jailer’s eyes glittered
understandingly and with a backward glance down the
lighted corridor he thrust his head and shoulders inside.
“Five hundred dollars for that
note!” he whispered. “Five hundred
beside the four you’ve got!”
“Jeekum’s a fool!”
said Neil, as the door closed on them. “I
feel sorry for him.”
“Why?”
“Because he is accepting the
money. Don’t you suppose that you have been
searched? Of course you have-probably
before I came, while you were half dead on the floor.
Somebody knows that you have the gold.”
“Why hasn’t it been taken?”
For a full minute Neil made no answer.
And his answer, when it did come, first of all was
a laugh.
“By George, that’s good!”
he cried exultingly. “Of course you were
searched-and by Jeekum! He knows, but
he hasn’t made a report of it to Strang because
he believes that in some way he will get hold of the
money. He is taking a big risk-but
he’s winning! I wonder what his first scheme
was?”
“Thought I’d bury it,
perhaps,” vouchsafed Nathaniel, throwing himself
upon the straw. “There’s room for
two here, Neil.”
A long silence fell between them.
The action during the last few minutes had been too
great an effort for Nathaniel and his wound troubled
him again. As the pain and his terrible thoughts
of Marion’s fate returned to him he regretted
that they had not ended it all in one last fight at
the door. There, at least, they might have died
like men instead of waiting to be shot down like dogs,
their hands bound behind them, their breasts naked
to the Mormon rifles. He did not fear death.
In more than one game he had played against its hand,
more often for love of the sport than not, but there
was a horror in being penned up and tortured by it.
He had come to look upon it as a fair enemy, filled
of course with subterfuge and treachery, which were
the laws of the game; but he had never dreamed of
it as anything but merciful in its quickness.
It was as if his adversary had broken an inviolable
pact with him and he sweated and tossed on his bed
of straw while Neil sat cool and silent on the bench
against the dungeon wall. Sheer exhaustion brought
him relief, and after a time he fell asleep.
He was awakened by Neil. The
white face of Marion’s brother was over him
when he opened his eyes and he was shaking him roughly
by the shoulder.
“Wake up, Nat!” he cried. “For
Heaven’s sake-wake up!”
He drew back as Nathaniel sleepily roused himself.
“I couldn’t help it, Nat,”
he apologized, laughing nervously. “You’ve
lain there like a dead man for hours. My head
is splitting with this damned silence. Come-smoke
up! I got some tobacco from our jailer and he
loaned me his pipe.”
Nathaniel jumped to his feet.
A fresh candle was burning on the table and in its
light he saw that a startling change had come into
Neil’s face during the hours he had slept.
It looked to him thinner and whiter, its lines had
deepened, and the young man’s eyes were filled
with gloomy dejection.
“Why didn’t you awaken
me sooner?” he exclaimed. “I deserve
a good drubbing for leaving you alone here!”
He saw fresh food on the table. “It’s
late-” he began.
“That is our dinner and supper,”
interrupted Neil. He held his watch close to
the candle. “Half past eight!”
“And no word-from-”
“No.”
The two men looked deeply into each other’s
eyes.
“Jeekum delivered my note to
her at noon when he was relieved,” said Neil.
“He did not carry it personally but swears that
he saw her receive it. He sent her word that
he would call at a certain place for a reply when
he was relieved again at five. There was no reply
for him-not a word from Winnsome.”
Their silence was painful. It
was Nathaniel who spoke first, hesitatingly, as though
afraid to say what was passing in his mind.
“I killed Winnsome’s father,
Neil,” he said, “and Winnsome has demanded
my death. I know that I am condemned to die.
But you-” His eyes flashed sudden
fire. “How do you know that my fate is to
be yours? I begin to see the truth. Winnsome
has not answered your note because she knows that
you are to live and that she will see you soon.
Between Winnsome and-Marion you will be
saved!”
Neil had taken a piece of meat and
was eating it as though he had not heard his companion’s
words.
“Help yourself, Nat. It’s our last
opportunity.”
“You don’t believe-”
“No. Lord, man, do you
suppose that Strang is going to let me live to kill
him?”
Somebody was fumbling with the chain at the dungeon
door.
The two men stared as it opened slowly
and Jeekum appeared. The jailer was highly excited.
“I’ve got word-but
no note!” he whispered hoarsely. “Quick!
Is it worth-”
“Yes! Yes!”
Nathaniel dug the gold pieces out
of his pockets and dropped them into the jailer’s
outstretched hand.
“I’ve had my boy watching
Winnsome Croche’s house,” continued the
sheriff, white with the knowledge of the risk he was
taking. “An hour ago Winnsome came out
of the house and went into the woods. My boy
followed. She ran to the lake, got into a skiff,
and rowed straight out to sea. She is following
your instructions!”
In his excitement he betrayed himself.
He had read the note.
There came a sound up the corridor,
the opening of a door, the echo of voices, and Jeekum
leaped back. Nathaniel’s foot held the cell
door from closing.
“Where is Marion?” he
cried softly, his heart standing still with dread.
“Great God-what about Marion?”
For an instant the sheriff’s
ghastly face was pressed against the opening.
“Marion has not been seen since
morning. The king’s officers are searching
for her.”
The door slammed, the chains clanked
loudly, and above the sound of Jeekum’s departure
Neil’s voice rose in a muffled cry of joy.
“They are gone! They are leaving the island!”
Nathaniel stood like one turned into
stone. His heart grew cold within him. When
he spoke his words were passionless echoes of what
had been.
“You are sure that Marion would
kill herself as soon as she became the wife of Strang?”
he asked.
“Yes-before his vile
hands touched more than the dress she wore!”
shouted Neil.
“Then Marion is dead,”
replied Nathaniel, as coldly as though he were talking
to the walls about him. “For last night
Marion was forced into the harem of the king.”
As he revealed the secret whose torture
he meant to keep imprisoned in his own breast he dropped
upon the pallet of straw and buried his face between
his arms, cursing himself that he had weakened in these
last hours of their comradeship.
He dared not look to see the effect
of his words on Neil. His companion uttered no
sound. Instead there was a silence that was terrifying.
At the end of it Neil spoke in a voice
so strangely calm that Nathaniel sat up and stared
at him through the gloom.
“I believe they are coming after us, Nat.
Listen!”
The tread of many feet came to them
faintly from beyond the corridor wall.
Nathaniel had risen. They drew
close together, and their hands clasped.
“Whatever it may be,”
whispered Neil, “may God have mercy on our souls!”
“Amen!” breathed Captain Plum.