Peyton staggered back to the settle
and sank down on it, exhausted. Elizabeth, hearing
black Sam moving about in the dining-room, which was
directly north of the hall, bade Molly summon him.
When he appeared, she ordered him and Cuff to carry
the settle, with the wounded man on it, into the east
parlor, and to place the man on the sofa there.
She then told Molly to hasten the supper, and to send
Williams to her up-stairs, and thereupon rejoined her
excited aunt above. When Williams attended her,
she gave him commands regarding the prisoner.
Peyton was thus carried through the
deep doorway in the south side of the hall into the
east parlor, which was now exceedingly habitable with
fire roaring and candles lighted. In the east
and south sides of this richly ornamented room were
deeply embrasured windows, with low seats. In
the west side was a mahogany door opening from the
old or south hall. In the north side, which was
adorned with wooden pillars and other carved woodwork,
was the door through which Peyton had been carried;
west of that, the decorated chimney-breast with its
English mantel and fireplace, and further west a pair
of doors opening from a closet, whence a winding staircase
descended cellarward. The ceiling was rich with
fanciful arabesque woodwork. Set in the chimney-breast,
over the mantel, was an oblong mirror. The wainscoting,
pillars, and other woodwork were of a creamy white.
But Peyton had no eye for details at the moment.
He noticed only that his entrance disturbed the slumbers
of the old gentleman Matthias Valentine who
had been sleeping in a great armchair by the fire,
and who now blinked in wonderment.
The negroes put down the settle and
lifted Peyton to a sofa that stood against the western
side of the room, between a spinet and the northern
wall. At Peyton’s pantomimic request they
then moved the sofa to a place near the fire, and
then, taking the settle along, marched out of the
room, back to the hall, closing the door as they went.
Peyton, too pain-racked and exhausted
to speak, lay back on the sofa, with closed eyes.
Old Valentine stared at him a few moments; then, curious
both as to this unexpected advent and as to the proximity
of supper, rose and hobbled from the parlor and across
the hall to the dining-room. For some time Peyton
was left alone. He opened his eyes, studied the
flying figures on the ceiling, the portraits on the
walls, the carpet, Philipse Manor-house,
like the best English houses of the time, had carpet
on its floors, the carving of the mantel,
the clock and candelabrum thereupon, the crossed rapiers
thereabove, the curves of the imported furniture.
His twinges and aches were so many and so diverse
that he made no attempt to locate them separately.
He could feel that the left leg of his breeches was
soaked with blood.
Finally the door opened, and in came
Williams and Cuff, the former with shears and bands
of linen, the latter with a basin of water. Williams,
whom Peyton had not before seen, scrutinized him critically,
and forthwith proceeded to expose, examine, wash, and
bind up the wounded leg, while Cuff stood by and played
the rôle of surgeon’s assistant. Peyton
speedily perceived on the steward’s part a reliable
acquaintance with the art of dressing cuts, and therefore
submitted without a word to his operations. Williams
was equally silent, breaking his reticence only now
and then to utter some monosyllabic command to Cuff.
When the wound was dressed, Williams
put the patient’s disturbed attire to rights,
and adjusted his hair. Peyton, with a feeling
of some relief, made to stretch the wounded leg, but
a sharp twinge cut the movement short.
“You should make a good surgeon,”
Peyton said at last, “you tie so damnably tight
a bandage.”
“I’ve bound up many a
wound, sir,” said Williams; “and some far
worse than yours. ’Tis not a dangerous
cut, yours, though ’twill be irritating while
it lasts. You won’t walk for a day or two.”
“It’s remarkable your
mistress has so much trouble taken with me, when she
intends to deliver me to the British.”
Peyton had inferred the steward’s
place in the house, from his appearance and manner.
“Why, sir,” said Williams,
“we couldn’t have you bleeding over the
floor and furniture. Besides, I suppose she wants
to hand you over in good condition.”
“I see! No bedraggled remnant
of a man, but a complete, clean, and comfortable candidate
for Cunningham’s gallows!” Peyton here
forgot his wound and attempted to sit upright, but
quickly fell back with a grimace and a groan.
“Better lie still, sir,”
counselled Williams, sagely. “If you need
any one, you are to call Cuff. He will be in
waiting in that hall, sir.” And the steward
pointed towards the east hall. “There will
be no use trying to get away. I doubt if you
could walk half across the room without fainting.
And if you could get out of the house, you’d
find black Sam on guard, with his duck-gun, and
Sam doesn’t miss once in a hundred times with
that duck-gun. Bring those things, Cuff.”
Williams indicated Peyton’s hat, remnant of sword,
and scabbard, which had been placed on the armchair
by the fireside.
“Leave my sword!” commanded Peyton.
“Can’t, sir!” said
Williams, affably. “Miss Elizabeth’s
orders were to take it away.”
Williams thereupon went from the room,
crossed the east hall, and entered the dining-room,
to report to Elizabeth, who now sat at supper with
Miss Sally and Mr. Valentine.
Cuff, with basin of water in one hand,
took up the hat, sword, and scabbard, with the other.
“Miss Elizabeth!” mused
Peyton. “Queen Elizabeth, I should say,
in this house. Gad, to be a girl’s prisoner,
tied down to a sofa by so small a cut!” Hereupon
he addressed Cuff, who was about to depart: “Where
is your mistress?”
“In the dining-room, eating supper.”
“And Mr. Colden, whom I saw
in that hall about an hour ago, when I bought the
horse?”
“Major Colden rode back to New York.”
“Major Colden! Major of what?”
“New Juzzey Vollingteers, sir.”
“What? Then he is in the
King’s service, after all? And when I was
here with my troops he said he was neutral. I’ll
never take a Tory’s word again.”
“Am you like to hab de chance,
sir?” queried Cuff, with a grin.
“What! You taunt me with
my situation?” And Harry’s head shot up
from the sofa as he made to rise and chastise the
boy; but he could not stand on his leg, and so remained
sitting, propped on his right arm, panting and glaring
at the negro.
Cuff, whose whiteness of teeth had
shown in his moment of mirth, now displayed much whiteness
of eye in his alarm at Peyton’s movement, and
glided to the door. As he went out to the hall,
he passed Molly, who was coming into the parlor with
a bowl of broth.
“Hah!” ejaculated Peyton
as she came towards him. “They would feed
the animal for the slaughter, eh?”
Molly curtseyed.
“Please, sir, it wa’n’t
they sent this. I brought it of my own accord,
sir, though with Miss Elizabeth’s permission.”
“Oh! so Miss Elizabeth did give her permission,
then?”
“Yes, sir. At least, she said it didn’t
matter, if I wished to.”
“And you did wish to? Well, you’re
a good girl, and I thank you.”
Whereupon Peyton took the bowl and sipped of the broth
with relish.
“Thank you, sir,” said
Molly, who then moved a small light chair from its
place by the wall to a spot beside the sofa and within
Peyton’s reach. “You can set the
bowl on this,” she added. “I must
go back to the kitchen.” And, after another
curtsey, she was gone.
The broth revived Peyton, and with
all his pain and fatigue he had some sense of comfort.
The handsome, well warmed, well lighted parlor, so
richly furnished, so well protected from the wind and
weather by the solid shutters outside its four small-paned
windows, was certainly a snug corner of the world.
So far seemed all this from stress and war, that Peyton
lost his strong realization of the fate that Elizabeth’s
threat promised him. Appreciation of his surroundings
drove away other thoughts and feelings. That he
should be taken and hanged was an idea so remote from
his present situation, it seemed rather like a dream
than an imminent reality. There surely would be
a way of his getting hence in safety. And he
imbibed mouthful after mouthful of the warm broth.
Presently old Mr. Valentine reappeared,
from the east hall, looking none the less comfortable
for the supper he had eaten. A long pipe was
in his hand, and, that he might absorb smoke and liquor
at the same time, he had brought with him from the
table, where the two ladies remained, a vast mug of
hot rum punch of Williams’s brewing. He
now set the mug on the mantel, lighted his pipe with
a brand from the fire, repossessed himself of the
mug, and sat down in the armchair, with a sigh of
huge satisfaction. It mattered not that this was
the parlor of Philipse Manor-house, for
Mr. Valentine, in his innocent way, indulged himself
freely in the privileges and presumptions of old age.
Peyton, after staring for some time
with curiosity at the smoky old gentleman, who rapidly
grew smokier, at last raised the bowl of broth for
a last gulp, saying, cheerily:
“To your very good health, sir!”
“Thank you, sir!” said
the old man, complacently, not making any movement
to reciprocate.
“What! won’t you drink to mine?”
“’Twould be a waste of
words to drink the health of a man that’s going
to be hanged,” replied Valentine, who at supper
had heard the ladies discuss Peyton’s intended
fate. He thereupon sent a cloud of smoke ceiling-ward
for the flying cherubs to rest on.
“The devil! You are economical!”
“Of words, maybe, not of liquor.”
The octogenarian quaffed deeply from the mug.
“They say hanging is an easy death,” he
went on, being in loquacious mood. “I never
saw but one man hanged. He didn’t seem to
enjoy it.” Mr. Valentine puffed slowly,
inwardly dwelling on the recollection.
“Oh, didn’t he?” said Peyton.
“No, he took it most unpleasant like.”
“Did you come in here to cheer
me up in my last hours?” queried Harry, putting
the empty bowl on the chair by the sofa.
“No,” replied the other,
ingenuously. “I came in for a smoke while
the ladies stayed at the table.” He then
went back to a subject that seemed to have attractions
for him. “I don’t know how hanging
will go with you. Cunningham will do the work.
They say he makes it as disagreeable as may be.
I’d come and see you hanged, but it won’t
be possible.”
“Then I suppose I shall have
to excuse you,” said Peyton, with resignation.
“Yes.” The old man
had finished his punch and set down his mug, and he
now yawned with a completeness that revealed vastly
more of red toothless mouth than one might have calculated
his face could contain. “Some take it easier
than others,” he went on. “It’s
harder with young men like you.” Again
he opened his jaws in a gape as whole-souled as that
of a house-dog before a kitchen fire. “It
must be disagreeable to have a rope tightened around
your neck. I don’t know.” He
thrust his pipe-stem absently between his lips, closed
his eyes, mumbled absently, “I don’t know,”
and in a few moments was asleep, his pipe hanging
from his mouth, his hands folded in his lap.
“A cheerful companion for a
man in my situation,” thought Peyton. His
mind had been brought back to the future. When
would this resolute and vengeful Miss Elizabeth fulfil
her threat? How would she proceed about it?
Had she already taken measures towards his conveyance
to the British lines? Should she delay until
he should be able to walk, there would be two words
about the matter. Meanwhile, he must wait for
developments. It was useless to rack his brain
with conjectures. His sense of present comfort
gradually resumed sway, and he placed his head again
on the sofa pillow and closed his eyes.
He was conscious for a time of nothing
but his deadened pain, his inward comfort, the breathing
of old Mr. Valentine, the intermittent raging of the
wind without, and the steady ticking of the clock on
the mantel, which delicately framed timepiece
had been started within the hour by Sam, who knew
Miss Elizabeth’s will for having all things in
running order. Peyton’s drowsiness wrapped
him closer and closer. Presently he was remotely
aware of the opening of the door, the tread of light
feet on the floor, the swish of skirts. But he
had now reached that lethargic point which involves
total indifference to outer things, and he did not
even open his eyes.
“Asleep,” said Elizabeth,
for it was she who had entered with her aunt.
Harry recognized the voice, and knew
that he was the subject of her remark; but his feeling
towards his contemptuous captor was not such as to
make him take the trouble of setting her right.
Therefore, he kept his eyes closed, having a kind
of satisfaction in her being mistaken.
“How handsome!” whispered
Miss Sally, who beamed more bigly and benignly after
supper than before.
“Which one, aunty?” said
Elizabeth, looking from Peyton to old Valentine.
Her aunt deigned to this levity only
a look of hopeless reproof.
Elizabeth sat down on the music-seat
before the spinet, and became serious, or,
more accurately, businesslike.
“On second thought,” said
she, “it won’t do to keep him here waiting
for one of our patrols to pass this way. In the
meantime some of the rebels might come into the neighborhood
and stop here. He must be delivered to the British
this very night!”
Peyton gave no outward sign of the
momentary heart stoppage he felt within.
“Why,” said the aunt,
speaking low, and in some alarm, “’twould
require Williams and both the blacks to take him, and
we should be left alone in the house.”
“I sha’n’t send
him to the troops,” said Elizabeth, in her usual
tone, not caring whether or not the prisoner should
be disturbed, for in his powerlessness
he could not oppose her plans if he did know them,
and in her disdain she had no consideration for his
feelings. “The troops shall come for him.
Black Sam shall go to the watch-house at King’s
Bridge with word that there’s an important rebel
prisoner held here, to be had for the taking.”
“Will the troops at King’s
Bridge heed the story of a black man?” Aunt
Sally seemed desirous of interposing objections to
immediate action.
“Their officer will heed a written
message from me,” said the niece. “Most
of the officers know me, and those at King’s
Bridge are aware I came here to-day.”
Thereupon she called in Cuff, and
sent him off for Williams, with orders that the steward
should bring her pen, ink, paper, and wax.
“Oh, Elizabeth!” cried
Miss Sally, looking at the floor. “Here’s
some of the poor fellow’s blood on the carpet.”
“Never mind. The blood
of an enemy is a sight easily tolerated,” said
the girl, probably unaware how nearly she had duplicated
a famous utterance of a certain King of France, whose
remark had borne reference to another sense than that
of sight.
Williams soon came in with the writing
materials, and placed them, at Elizabeth’s direction,
on a table that stood between the two eastern windows,
and on which was a lighted candelabrum. Elizabeth
sat down at the table, her back towards the fireplace
and Peyton.
“I wish you to send black Sam
to me,” said she to the steward, “and to
take his place on guard with the gun till he returns
from an errand.”
Williams departed, and Elizabeth began
to make the quill fly over the paper, her aunt looking
on from beside the table. Peyton opened his eyes
and looked at them.
“It does seem a pity,”
said Miss Sally at last. “Such a pretty
gentleman, such a gallant soldier!”
“Gentleman?” echoed Elizabeth,
writing on. “The fellow is not a gentleman!
Nor a gallant soldier!”
Peyton rose to a sitting posture as
if stung by a hornet, but was instantly reminded of
his wound. But neither Elizabeth nor her aunt
saw or heard his movement. The girl, unaware that
he was awake, continued:
“Does a gentleman or a gallant
soldier desert the army of his king to join that of
his king’s enemies?”
Quick came the answer, not
from aunt Sally, but from Peyton on the sofa.
“A gallant soldier has the right
to choose his side, and a gentleman need not fight
against his country!”
Elizabeth did not suffer herself to
appear startled at this sudden breaking in. Having
finished her note, she quietly folded it, and addressed
it, while she said:
“A gallant soldier, having once
chosen his side, will be loyal to it; and a gentleman
never bore the odious title of deserter.”
“A gentleman can afford to wear
any title that is redeemed by a glorious cause and
an extraordinary danger. When I took service
with the King’s army in England, I never dreamt
that army would be sent against the King’s own
colonies; and not till I arrived in Boston did I know
the true character of this revolt. We thought
we were coming over merely to quell a lawless Boston
rabble. I gave in my resignation ”
“But did not wait for it to
be accepted,” interrupted Elizabeth, quietly,
as she applied to the folded paper the wax softened
by the flame of a candle.
“I was a little hasty,” said Harry.
“The rebel army was the proper
place for such fellows,” said Elizabeth.
“No true British officer would be guilty of such
a deed!”
“Probably not! It required exceptional
courage!”
Peyton knew, as well as any, that
the British were brave enough; but he was in mood
for sharp retort.
“That is not the reason,”
said Elizabeth, coldly, refusing to show wrath.
“Your enemies hold such acts as yours in detestation.”
“I am not serving in this war
for the approbation of my enemies.”
At this moment black Sam came in.
Elizabeth handed him the letter, and said:
“You are to take my horse Cato,
and ride with this message to the British barrier
at King’s Bridge. It is for the officer
in command there. When the sentries challenge
you, show this, and say it is of the greatest consequence
and must be delivered at once.”
“Yes, Miss Elizabeth.”
“The commander,” she went
on, “will probably send here a body of troops
at once, to convey this prisoner within the lines.
You are to return with them. If no time is lost,
and they send mounted troops, you should be back in
an hour.”
Peyton could hardly repress a start.
“An hour at most, miss, if nothing stops,”
said the negro.
“If any officer of my acquaintance
is in command,” said Elizabeth, “there
will be no delay. Cuff shall let the troops in,
through that hall, as soon as they arrive.”
Whereupon the black man, a stalwart
and courageous specimen of his race, went rapidly
from the room.
“One hour!” murmured Peyton, looking at
the clock.
Molly, the maid, now reappeared, carrying
carefully in one hand a cup, from which a thin steam
ascended.
“What is’t now, Molly?”
inquired Elizabeth, rising from her chair.
Molly blushed and was much confused.
“Tea, ma’am, if you please! I thought,
maybe, you’d allow the gentleman ”
“Very well,” said Elizabeth.
“Be the good Samaritan if you like, child.
His tea-drinking days will soon be over. Come,
aunt Sally, we shall be in better company elsewhere.”
And she returned to the dining-room, not deigning
her prisoner another look.
Miss Sally followed, but her feelings
required confiding in some one, and before she went
she whispered to the embarrassed maid, “Oh, Molly,
to think so sweet a young gentleman should be completely
wasted!”
Molly heaved a sigh, and then approached
the young gentleman himself, with whom she was now
alone, saving the presence of the slumbering Valentine.
“So your name is Molly?
And you’ve brought me tea this time?”
“Yes, sir, if you
please, sir.” She took up the bowl from
the chair and placed the cup in its stead. “I
put sugar in this, sir, but if you’d rather ”
“I’d rather have it just
as you’ve made it, Molly,” he said, in
a singularly gentle, unsteady tone. He raised
the cup, and sipped. “Delicious, Molly! Hah!
Your mistress thinks my tea-drinking days will soon
be over.”
“I’m very sorry, sir.”
“So am I.” He held
the cup in his left hand, supporting his upright body
with his right arm, and looked rather at vacancy than
at the maid. “Never to drink tea again,”
he said, “or wine or spirits, for that matter!
To close your eyes on this fine world! Never again
to ride after the hounds, or sing, or laugh, or chuck
a pretty girl under the chin!”
And here, having set down the cup,
he chucked Molly herself under the chin, pretending
a gaiety he did not feel.
“Never again,” he went
on, “to lead a charge against the enemies of
our liberty; not to live to see this fight out, the
King’s regiments driven from the land, the States
take their place among the free nations of the world!
By God, Molly, I don’t want to die yet!”
It was not the fear of death, it was
the love of life, and what life might have in reserve,
that moved him; and it now asserted itself in him
with a force tenfold greater than ever before.
Death, or, rather, the ceasing of life, as
he viewed it now, when he was like to meet it without
company, with prescribed preliminaries, in an ignominious
mode, was a far other thing than as viewed in the exaltation
of battle, when a man chances it hot-headed, uplifted,
thrilled, in gallant comradeship, to his own fate
rendered careless by a sense of his nothingness in
comparison with the whole vast drama. Moreover,
in going blithely to possible death in open fight,
one accomplishes something for his cause; not so,
going unwillingly to certain death on an enemy’s
gallows. It was, too, an exasperating thought
that he should die to gratify the vengeful whim of
an insolent Tory girl.
“Will it really come to that?”
asked Molly, in a frightened tone.
“As surely as I fall into British hands!”
Peyton remembered the case of General
Charles Lee, whose resignation of half-pay had not
been acknowledged; who was, when captured by the British,
long in danger of hanging, and who was finally rated
as an ordinary war prisoner only for Washington’s
threat to retaliate on five Hessian field officers.
If a major-general, whose desertion, even if admitted,
was from half-pay only, would have been hanged without
ceremony but for General Howe’s fear of a “law
scrape,” and had been saved from shipment to
England for trial, only by the King’s fear that
Washington’s retaliation would disaffect the
Hessian allies, for what could a mere captain look,
who had come over from the enemy in action, and whose
punishment would entail no official retaliation?
“And your mistress expects a
troop of British soldiers here in an hour to take
me! Damn it, if I could only walk!” And
he looked rapidly around the room, in a kind of distraction,
as if seeking some means of escape. Realizing
the futility of this, he sighed dismally, and drank
the remainder of the tea.
“You couldn’t get away
from the house, sir,” said Molly. “Williams
is watching outside.”
“I’d take a chance if
I could only run!” Peyton muttered. He had
no fear that Molly would betray him. “If
there were some hiding-place I might crawl to!
But the troops would search every cranny about the
house.” He turned to Molly suddenly, seeing,
in his desperate state and his lack of time, but one
hope. “I wonder, could Williams be bribed
to spirit me away?”
Molly’s manner underwent a slight chill.
“Oh, no,” said she.
“He’d die before he’d disobey Miss
Elizabeth. We all would, sir. I’m
very sorry, indeed, sir.” Whereupon, taking
up the empty bowl and teacup, she hastened from the
room.
Peyton sat listening to the clock-ticks.
He moved his right leg so that the foot rested on
the floor, then tried to move the left one after it,
using his hand to guide it. With great pains and
greater pain, he finally got the left foot beside
the right. He then undertook to stand, but the
effort cost him such physical agony as could not be
borne for any length of time. He fell back with
a groan to the sofa, convinced that the wounded leg
was not only, for the time, useless itself, but also
an impediment to whatever service the other leg might
have rendered alone. But he remained sitting up,
his right foot on the floor.
Suddenly there was a raucous sound
from old Mr. Valentine. He had at last begun
to snore. But this infliction brought its own
remedy, for when his jaws opened wider his tobacco
pipe fell from his mouth and struck his folded hands.
He awoke with a start, and blinked wonderingly at
Peyton, whose face, turned towards the old man, still
wore the look of disapproval evoked by the momentary
snoring.
“Still here, eh?” piped
Mr. Valentine. “I dreamt you were being
hanged to the fireplace, like a pig to be smoked.
I was quite upset over it! Such a fine young
gentleman, and one of Harry Lee’s officers, too!”
And the old man shook his head deploringly.
“Then why don’t you help
me out of this?” demanded Peyton, whose impulse
was for grasping at straws, for he thought of black
Sam urging Cato through the wind towards King’s
Bridge at a gallop.
“It ain’t possible,” said Valentine,
phlegmatically.
“If it were, would you?”
asked Harry, a spark of hope igniting from the appearance
that the old man was, at least, not antagonistic to
him.
“Why, yes,” began the octogenarian, placidly.
Harry’s heart bounded.
“If,” the old man went
on, “I could without lending aid to the King’s
enemies. But you see I couldn’t. I
won’t lend aid to neither side’s enemies.
I don’t want to die afore my time.”
And he gazed complacently at the fire.
Peyton knew the hopeless immovability of selfish old
age.
“God!” he muttered, in despair. “Is
there no one I can turn to?”
“There’s none within hearing
would dare go against the orders of Miss Elizabeth,”
said Mr. Valentine.
“Miss Elizabeth evidently rules
with a firm hand,” said Peyton, bitterly.
“Her word ” He stopped suddenly,
as if struck by a new thought. “If I could
but move her! If I could make her change
her mind!”
“You couldn’t. No
one ever could, and as for a rebel soldier ”
“She has a heart of iron, that
girl!” broke in Peyton. “The cruelty
of a savage!”
Mr. Valentine took on a sincerely
deprecating look. “Oh, you mustn’t
abuse Miss Elizabeth,” said he. “It
ain’t cruelty, it’s only proper pride.
And she isn’t hard. She has the kindest
heart, to those she’s fond of.”
“To those she’s fond of,” repeated
Harry, mechanically.
“Yes,” said the old man;
“her people, her horses, her dogs and cats,
and even her servants and slaves.”
“Tender creature, who has a
heart for a dog and not for a man!”
The old man’s loyalty to three
generations of Philipses made him a stubborn defender,
and he answered:
“She’d have no less a heart for a man
if she loved him.”
“If she loved him!” echoed Peyton, and
began to think.
“Ay, and a thousand times more
heart, loving him as a woman loves a man.”
Mr. Valentine spoke knowingly, as one acquainted by
enviable experience with the measure of such love.
“As a woman loves a man!”
repeated Peyton. Suddenly he turned to Valentine.
“Tell me, does she love any man so, now?”
Peyton did not know the relation in which Elizabeth
and Major Colden stood to each other.
“I can’t say she loves
one,” replied Valentine, judicially, “though ”
But Peyton had heard enough.
“By heaven, I’ll try it!”
he cried. “Such miracles have happened!
And I have almost an hour!”
Old Valentine blinked at him, with
stupid lack of perception. “What is it,
sir?”
“I shall try it!” was
Peyton’s unenlightening answer. “There’s
one chance. And you can help me!”
“The devil I can!” replied
Valentine, rising from his chair in some annoyance.
“I won’t lend aid, I tell you!”
“It won’t be ‘lending
aid.’ All I beg is that you ask Miss Elizabeth
to see me alone at once, and that you’ll
forget all I’ve said to you. Don’t
stand staring! For Christ’s sake, go and
ask her to come in! Don’t you know?
Only an hour, less than that, now!”
“But she mayn’t come here
for the asking,” objected the old man, somewhat
dazed by Peyton’s petulance.
“She must come here!”
cried Harry. “Induce her, beg her, entice
her! Tell her I have a last request to make of
my jailer, no, excite her curiosity; tell
her I have a confession to make, a plot to disclose, anything!
In heaven’s name, go and send her here!”
It was easier to comply with so light
a request than to remain recipient of such torrent-like
importunity. “I’ll try, sir,”
said the peace-loving old man, “but I have no
hope,” and he hobbled from the room. He
left the door open as he went, and Harry, tortured
by impatience, heard him shuffling over the hall floor
to the dining-room.
Peyton’s mind was in a whirl.
He glanced at the clock. These were his thoughts:
“Fifty minutes! To make
a woman love me! A proud woman, vain and wilful,
who hates our cause, who detests me! To make her
love me! How shall I begin? Keep your wits
now, Harry, my son, ’tis for your
life! How to begin? Why doesn’t she
come? Damn the clock, how loud it ticks!
I feel each tick. No, ’tis my heart I feel.
My God, will she not come? And the time
is going ”
“Well, sir, what is it?”
He looked from the clock to the doorway, where stood
Elizabeth.