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"Yes! and, moreover, I offered a pair of patent steel spring handcuffs to the sheriff, John Keepe, in person, and pressed him to purchase them, a.s.suring him that he would have occasion for their use if ever he caught that grand rascal, Black Donald!"
"'Ah, the atrocious villain, if I thought I should ever have the satisfaction of springing them upon his wrists, I'd buy them at my own proper cost!' said the sheriff, taking them in his hands and examining them curiously.
"'Ah! he's a man of Belial, that same Black Donald--thee'd better buy the handcuffs, John,' said I.
"'Nay, friend, I don't know; and as for Black Donald, we have some hopes of taking the wretch at last!' said the simple gentleman.
"'Ah, verily, John, that's a good hearing for peaceful travelers like myself,' said I.
"'Excellent! excellent! For when that fell marauder once swings from the gallows----'
"'His neck will be broken, John?'
"'Yes, friend! yes, probably; after which honest men may travel in safety! Ah, never have I adjusted a hempen cravat about the throat of any aspirant for such an honor with less pain than I shall officiate at the last toilet of Black Donald!'
"'If thee catch him!'
"'Exactly, friend, if I catch him; but the additional reward offered by Major Warfield, together with the report that he often frequents our towns and villages in disguise, will stimulate people to renewed efforts to discover and capture him,' said the sheriff.
"'Ah! that will be a great day for Alleghany. And when Black Donald is hanged, I shall make an effort to be present at the solemnity myself!'
"'Do, friend,' said the sheriff, 'and I will see to getting you a good place for witnessing the proceedings.'
"'I have no doubt thee will, John--a very good place! And I a.s.sure thee that there will not be one present more interested in those proceedings than myself,' said I.
"'Of course, that is very natural, for there is no one more in danger from these marauders than men of your itinerant calling. Good heavens!
It was but three years ago a peddler was robbed and murdered in the woods around the Hidden House.'
"'Just so, John,' said I; 'and it's my opinion that often when I've been traveling along the road at night Black Donald hasn't been far off! But tell me, John, so that I may have a chance of earning that thousand dollars--what disguises does this son of Moloch take?'
"'Why, friend, it is said that he appears as a Methodist missionary, going about selling tracts; and sometimes as a knife grinder, and sometimes simulates your calling, as a peddler!' said the unsuspicious sheriff.
"I thought, however, it was time to be off, so I said 'Thee had better let me sell thee those handcuffs, John. Allow me! I will show thee their beautiful machinery! Hold out thy wrists, if thee pleases, John.'
"The unsuspicious officer, with a face brimful of interest, held out his wrists for experiment.
"I snapped the ornaments on them in a little less than no time, and took up my pack and disappeared before the sheriff had collected his faculties and found out his position!"
"Ha, ha, ha! Haw, haw, haw! Ho, ho, ho!" laughed the outlaws, in every key of laughter. "And so our captain, instead of being pinioned by the sheriff, turned the tables and actually manacled his honor! Hip, hip, hurrah! Three times three for the merry captain, that manacled the sheriff!"
"Hush, burn ye! There's some one coming!" exclaimed the captain, rising and listening. "It is Le Noir, who was to meet me here to-night on important business!"
CHAPTER XXI.
GABRIEL LE NOIR.
Naught's had! all's spent!
When our desires are gained without content.
--Shakespeare.
"The colonel!" exclaimed the three men in a breath, as the door opened and a tall, handsome and distinguished-looking gentleman, wrapped in a black military cloak and having his black beaver pulled low over his brow, strode into the room.
All arose upon their feet to greet him as though he had been a prince.
With a haughty wave of the hand, he bade them resume their seats, and beckoning their leader, said:
"Donald, I would have a word with you!"
"At your command, colonel!" said the outlaw, rising and taking a candle and leading the way into the adjoining room, the same in which fourteen years before old Granny Grewell and the child had been detained.
Setting the candle upon the mantelpiece, Black Donald stood waiting for the visitor to open the conversation, a thing that the latter seemed in no hurry to do, for he began walking up and down the room in stern silence.
"You seem disturbed, colonel," at length said the outlaw.
"I am disturbed--more than disturbed! I am suffering!"
"Suffering, colonel?"
"Aye, suffering! From what think you? The pangs of remorse!"
"Remorse! Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha!" laughed the outlaw till all the rafters rang.
"Aye, man, you may laugh; but I repeat that I am tortured with remorse!
And for what do you suppose? For those acts of self-preservation that fanatics and fools would stigmatize as crimes? No, my good fellow, no!
but for one 'unacted crime!'"
"I told your honor so!" cried the outlaw, triumphantly.
"Donald, when I go to church, as I do constantly, I hear the preacher prating of repentance; but man, I never knew the meaning of the word until recently."
"And I can almost guess what it is that has enlightened your honor?"
said the outlaw.
"Yes, it is that miserable old woman and babe! Donald, in every vein of my soul I repent not having silenced them both forever while they were yet in my power!"
"Just so, colonel; the dead never come back, or if they do, are not recognized as property holders in this world. I wish your honor had taken my advice and sent that woman and child on a longer journey."
"Donald, I was younger then than now. I--shrank from bloodshed," said the man in a husky voice.
"Bah! superst.i.tion! Bloodshed--blood is shed every day! 'We kill to live!' say the butchers. So do we. Every creature preys upon some other creature weaker than himself--the big beasts eat up the little ones--artful men live on the simple! So be it! The world was made for the strong and cunning! Let the weak and foolish look to themselves!"
said the outlaw, with a loud laugh.
While he spoke the visitor resumed his rapid, restless striding up and down the room. Presently he came again to the side of the robber and whispered:
"Donald, that girl has returned to the neighborhood, brought back by old Warfield. My son met her in the woods a month ago, fell into conversation with her, heard her history, or as much of it as she herself knows. Her name is Capitola! She is the living image of her mother! How she came under the notice of old Warfield--to what extent he is acquainted with her birth and rights--what proofs may be in his possession I know not. All that I have discovered after the strictest inquiry that I was enabled to make, is this--that the old beggar woman that died and was buried at Major Warfield's expense, was no other than Nancy Grewell, returned--that the night before she died she sent for Major Warfield and had a long talk with him, and that shortly afterward the old scoundrel traveled to the north and brought home this girl!"