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He laid his hand on my arm, speaking very gently and gravely.
"Mr. Cardigan, Miss Warren is the truest, bravest, sweetest woman I have ever known. She received the news of her dreadful position as a gallant soldier receives the fire of the enemy. When it was made hopelessly clear to her that this lunatic Renard was her father, and that she was not a Warren, not an heiress, that she must now give up all thought of the family on which she had so long imposed--and give up all pretensions to _you_, sir--she acquiesced with a dignity that might have become a princess of the blood, sir! No whining there, Mr.
Cardigan! Not a whimper, sir; not a reproach, not a tear. Her first thought was of pity for her father--this little, withered lunatic, who sat there devouring her with his eyes of a sick hound. She went to him before us all; she took his hand--his hard, little claw--and kissed it. By G.o.d, gentlemen, blood tells!"
After a long silence I repeated, "Blood tells."
Mount, head in his hands, was weeping.
"Then came Butler, the forger," said Foxcroft, pointing at him. "And when he found that, after all, Miss Warren honoured herself too highly to seek a rehabilitation through his name, he came here and threatened this poor old man's life--threatened to denounce him as a thief, and have him hung at a cross-roads, unless she gave herself to him!
Then--then she consented."
Butler was sitting forward in his chair, his bloodless face supported between his slim fingers, his eyes on vacancy. He did not seem to hear the words that branded him; he did not appear to see us as we drew closer around him.
"In the orchard," muttered Mount; "we can hang him with his own bridle."
We paused for an instant, gazing silently at the doomed man. Then Mount touched him on the shoulder.
At the voiceless summons he looked up at us as though stunned.
"You must hang," said Mount, gravely.
"Not that! No!" I stammered; "I can't do it! Give him a sword--give him something to fight with! Jack--I can't do it. I am not made that way!"
There was a touch on my arm; Silver Heels stood beside me.
"Let them deal with him," she murmured, "you cannot fight with him; there is no honour in him."
"No!--no honour in him!" I repeated.
He had risen, and now stood, staring vacantly at me.
"d.a.m.nation!" cried Mount, "are you going to let him loose on the world again?"
"I cannot slay him," I said.
"But a rope can!" said Mount.
"Do you then draw it," I replied, "and never rail more at the hangman!"
After a moment I unlocked and opened the door. As in a trance, Butler pa.s.sed out into the moonlight; Mount stole close behind him, and I saw his broad knife glimmer as he followed.
"Let him go," I said, wearily. "I choke with all this foul intrigue.
Is there no work to do, Jack, save the sheriff's? Faugh! Let him go!"
Butler slowly set foot to stirrup; Mount s.n.a.t.c.hed the pistol from the saddle-holster with a savage sneer.
"No, no," he said. "Trust a scoundrel if you will, lad, but draw his fangs first. Oh, Lord above!--but I hate to let him go! Shall I? I'll give him a hundred yards before I fire! And I'll not aim at that!
Shall I?"
If Butler heard him he made no sign. He turned in his saddle and looked at Silver Heels.
Should I let him loose on the world once more? G.o.d knows I am no prophet, nor pretend to see behind the veil; yet, as I stood there, looking on Walter Butler, I thought the haze that the moon spun in the garden grew red like that fearsome light which tinges the smoke of burning houses, and I remembered that dream I had of him, so long ago, when I saw him in the forest, with blood on him, and fresh scalps at his belt--and the scalps were not of the red men.
Should I, who had him in my power, and could now forever render the demon in him powerless--should I let him go free into the world, or send him forever to the dreadful abode of lost souls?
War was at hand. War would come at dawn when the Grenadiers marched into Concord town. To slay him, then, would be no murder. But now?
Mount, watching me steadily, raised his rifle.
"No," I said.
What was I to do? There was no prison to hale him to; the jails o'
Boston lodged no Tories. Justice? There was no justice save that mockery at Province House. Law? Gage was the law--Gage, the friend of this man. What was I to do? Once again Mount raised his rifle.
"No," I said.
So pa.s.sed Walter Butler from among us, riding slowly out into the shadowy world, under the calm moon. G.o.d witness that I conducted as my honour urged, not as my hot blood desired--and He shall deal with me one day, face to face, that I let loose this man on the world, yet did not dream of the h.e.l.l he should make of Tryon County ere his red soul was fled again to the h.e.l.l that hatched it!
So rode forth mine enemy, Walter Butler, invulnerable for me in his armour of dishonour, unpunished for the woe that he had wrought, unmarked by justice which the dawn had not yet roused from her long sleep in chains.
Again Mount raised his rifle.
"No," I said.
A little breeze began stirring in the moonlit orchard; our horses tossed their heads and stamped; then silence fell.
After a long while the voice of Mount recalled me to myself; he had drawn poor Renard to a seat on the rotting steps of the porch.
"Now do you know me, Cade?" asked Mount, again and again.
The Weasel folded his withered hands in his lap and looked up, solemnly.
"Cade? Cade, old friend?" persisted Mount, piteously, drawing his great arm about the Weasel's stooping shoulders.
The Weasel's solemn eyes met his in silence.
Mount forced a cheerful laugh that rang false in the darkness.
"What! Forget the highway, Cade? The King's highway, old friend? The moon at the cross-roads? Eh? You remember? Say you remember, Cade."
The blank eyes of the Weasel were fixed on Mount.
"The forest? Eh, Cade? Ho!--lad! The rank smell o' the moss, and the stench of rotting logs? The quiet in the woods, the hermit-bird piping in the pines? Say you remember, old friend!" he begged; "tell me you remember! Ho! lad, have you forgot the tune the war-arrow sings?"
And he made a long-drawn, whispering whimper with his lips.
In pantomime he crouched and pointed; the Weasel's mild eyes turned.