A chill gray dawn is breaking when
Honor Blake opens her eyes. She is in bed in
her own room, and her father is siting beside her,
watchful and anxious. At first she wonders to
see him there, then slowly a dim sense of pain and
fear comes back to her.
“You are better?” he says
cheerily. “That’s right! I’ll
go away now, and you’ll get a sleep; but Aileen
shall stay in the room, in case you should feel faint
again.”
“Faint?” she repeats,
with a smile. “Have I been faint then?”
“Faith and you have, my dear!
I never knew any one stay so long in a swoon before.
I half thought you were dead when I saw you first;
but you are better now, and we’ll talk no more
about it.”
As he rises, she sees that he carries
his left arm in a sling and that he looks tired and
pale. Then suddenly every detail of the past night
comes back to her, and she feels for a few seconds
as if she should sink back into unconsciousness again.
“It’s nothing a
mere scratch; but they insisted on dressing it up like
this!” her father cries hastily, seeing the change
that has crept into her face. “No one is
much hurt but that rascally groom of yours. He’s
got a skinful that will keep him quiet, or I’m
mistaken!”
“Father,” the girl whispers
faintly, “some one was in it last night who who
must be saved at any price. It would kill me,
I think” pantingly “if
harm came to him.”
Her father’s face, as he listens,
has grown as hard as a face cut out of granite; and
she knows, before a word is spoken, that her plea has
fallen upon deaf ears.
“They must take their chance,”
he says grimly; “I would not stir a finger to
save the life of any one of them.”
Honor knows that there is no more
to be said; but as she sinks back among her pillows,
a passionate determination to save this man whom she
loves rises in her heart. But does she love him?
He has been very dear to her all her life; but now
a great gulf has opened between them they
can never be to each other as they have been.
The past is as dead as the love that made it so bright
and so beautiful; but, for the sake of that dead past,
she feels that she must save him from the consequence
of this mad folly into which he has been led or driven.
The birds are singing, now, the sky
has grown suddenly rosy, and the new day is as calm
and bright as the night was wild and stormy. But
to Honor Blake no peace comes, no brightness.
It seems to her she shall never know peace again.
As she is turning into the morning-room,
a heavy step on the tiled floor makes her look round;
and Launce stands before her. With a glad cry
the girl flies to him.
“Oh, Launce,” she sobs,
“we thought you were shot last night; and we ”
But he stops her almost impatiently.
“And what happened here last
night? What is the meaning of that and
that?” pointing at bullet-holes in
the walls and the door.
“Why, Launce, have you not heard?”
“I have heard nothing,” he says shortly,
“about Donaghmore.”
She looks at him wonderingly at
his soiled dress, his haggard face and fierce eyes,
so unlike the face and eyes of her favorite brother.
“Where have you been all night,
Launce? And what has happened to make you look
so dreadfully ill and and strange?”
He has followed her into the morning-room
and closed the door behind them.
“I have been to Drum with the
body of that fellow who was shot on the moss.”
“Oh, Launce, who was he?”
He sinks down upon a chair before
he answers her a man tired in body and
mind. Utterly worn out he looks now in the clear
strong light.
“He was Mrs. Dundas’s
friend and guest her lover, for all I can
tell,” he says scornfully. “I hope
she is proud of him and of the end he has come to.
He was shot down like a dog. I heard the cry he
gave, I was so close behind him.”
The tears are rolling down Honor’s
cheeks; she is trembling so that she can scarcely
stand.
“Oh, Launce,” she cries
piteously, “and it might have been you!”
“It ought to have been,”
her brother says, with a low harsh laugh that echoes
dismally through the quiet sunny room. “That
is where the mistake comes in!” Honor looks
at him in dismay. He is so unlike himself that
he frightens her. “I was to have gone first according
to their program so that the men might
attack me and give the police the chance of coming
down upon them unawares. She saw me go out of
her house to what she thought would be certain death,
and she never lifted a finger to keep me back.
That was womanly, wasn’t it?”
The girl cannot answer him. She
has never liked this woman she has shrunk
from and distrusted her always; but she never dreamed
she could be capable of treachery so base and cruel
as this.
“And whom do you think they
were after?” Launce says, after a pause.
“Power Magill! To think of a man like that
being mixed up with the rabble rout that was out last
night! But they missed him; and, though I hate
the fellow, I was glad that they did.”
The girl has crossed the room and
is standing close beside him now, her hand on the
arm of his chair, her white face bent toward him.
“No, Launce, they did not miss
him he was taken here!” He listens;
but it is evident that he does not understand.
“Yes, in this house,” the girl goes on
coldly, “where he has been a welcome guest and
friend all his life! He came in with the rest
to threaten and rob and murder, too, if
need be, I have no doubt! We have been fortunate
in our friends and neighbors, Launce!”
“By Jove!” he gasps, and
sits and stares at her a man thoroughly
startled and distressed.
Not to him need she apply for help
in the plan that has already vaguely formed itself
in her mind. She knows quite well that he would
rather hinder then help her in any effort to save
Power Magill. If he is to be saved at all, it
must be at once, before they have time to remove him
to Dublin; and the girl’s heart throbs and her
brain grows dizzy as she tries to think out her simple
yet daring scheme. It is that some one as
near his height and build as possible should
get leave to visit him, and then that they should
change clothes, and Power Magill should walk out in
place of his visitor. She has read of such things
being done before; why should they not be done again?
But the question is, What man in the county would
willingly take the place of Power Magill?
“It must be done,” the
girl says to herself, as she listens to the talk going
on about her; for of course every one is talking of
the men taken in the affray of the past night, and
their chances of heavy punishment. “Some
one can be got surely, to run the risk if
not for love, then for money!”
Brian Beresford is away at Drum; and
she is glad of it it would be awkward to
have him about the house at the present crisis.
About a mile from Donaghmore, on the
Boyne road, stands a cottage that, in the summer season,
is almost hidden from sight by the masses of wild
roses and jasmine that cover its old walls. It
is a picturesque little place enough, and wondrously
clean for an Irish cottage; but it is not in good
repute in the place. Magistrates shake their heads
when they hear of meetings held on the quiet at Hugh
Scanlan’s; and more than once terror and disaster
have been carried into quiet homes by order of the
men who meet there.
Scanlan is a man over eighty, but
erect and vigorous, and full of subtle cunning.
It is to this man Honor turns in trouble and perplexity.
He is no friend of hers all her life she
has been taught to look upon him as an evil man and
a bad neighbor, who would do any harm that lay in
his power to her or hers. But to this she never
gives a thought now. Power must be helped; and,
if any man in Donaghmore can help him, it is Scanlan.
The afternoon sun shines brightly
upon the strip of garden as she opens the gate and
walks up to the half-closed door. From the threshold
she can see all round the one room that the place
contains. It is low, and would be dim but for
the great fire burning, hot as the day is, on the
low hearth. The owner of the cottage has been
sitting before the fire smoking; but, at the sight
of Honor standing on his doorstep, he rises to his
feet.
“Good-evening!” the girl
says in her low clear voice. “I want very
much to speak to you! May I come in?”
For an instant the ready tact of his
race seems to forsake the old man, and he stares at
her stupidly.
“Robert Blake’s daughter
asking to come into my house?” he mutters, raising
his withered hands with a gesture of the most intense
surprise.
“Yes,” the girl answers
gently. “I am in trouble; and I want you
to help me, if you will.”
She has stepped forward uninvited,
and is close beside him now, looking up into his face
with eyes that have not a shadow of fear or even distrust
in them.
“There are more than yourself
in the deep trouble this day, miss.”
“Yes; and it is about one who
is in deep trouble that I have come to talk to you.”
He has placed a chair for her full
in the light of the open door, where he can see every
sign of feeling that crosses her face; but he keeps
well in the shade himself. Oh, how Honor’s
heart beats as she looks up at him and realizes that
in this very room the leaders of last night’s
outrage may have met to arrange their plans! She
is not afraid, though her reason tells her there might
be grave cause for fear in placing herself in the
hands of a treacherous man and an open enemy of her
father’s house.
“Faith, miss, an’ if it’s
all wan to you, you may do the talking and I’ll
listen! Talking is mighty dangerous for the loikes
of me, these times!”
“Yes, I know,” the girl
replies; “but I do not want you to talk.
I will tell you what I want you to do, and then you
can say, ‘Yes’ or ‘No,’ as
you think best. But, oh” with
a sudden clasping of the gloved hands lying on her
lap “I do hope you will say ’Yes’!”
And simply and clearly, her pretty
voice broken in its earnestness, her eyes shining
like stars as they fix themselves on the gray wrinkled
face before her, she tells him what it is she wants
done, and how much she can offer toward paying for
the doing of it.
“It is not much,” she
says, looking at the small roll of Irish pound-notes
in her hand, “but it is all I have of my own
in the world; and, when he is free, he will pay you
himself liberally.”
The old man listens to her like one
lost in a dream. She looks to him more like an
angel than a living woman as she stands there pleading
so earnestly for, in her agitation, she
has risen and is facing him, the sunshine falling
like a glory all about her.
In his excitement he takes to blessing
her in Irish, and, as the rapid words, instinct with
strong feeling, [lack in the text] upon her ears,
Honor draws back disconcerted.
“Are you angry?” she says.
“I thought you would have been glad to help
him! He has given up everything friends,
position, home, and country, it may be, for this cause
to which you belong.”
“And I have nothing to give
up but my life,” the old man answers with sudden
unlooked-for dignity; “and that I would lay down
this hour to see him free and safe once more.”
“Then you will help us?” she says eagerly.
“Shure I’m the most helpless
of ould creatures, but I’ll do what I can,”
he answers guardedly, and with so swift a change of
voice and manner that Honor almost loses hope.
However, there is no choice left her
now, nothing to be done but to give the man her poor
little bribe and go home, leaving Power Magill to
his mercy.
Little does the girl dream, as she
walks sadly back to Donaghmore through the waning
light, that she has formed a protecting barrier round
the old home and its inmates that will outlast the
storms of years.