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I lifted myself up in the bed, too deeply interested to lie still any longer.
"Now listen, Pete," I explained earnestly. "I've got sufficient money to pay you well for all you do, and, just as soon as you get me something to eat, I want you to go down to the Landing and bring Lawyer Haines back here with you. Just tell him a sick white man wants to see him at once, and not a word to anyone else. You might tell Haines this is a private matter--you understand?"
"Yas, sah," the whites of his eyes rolling. "He done know ol' Pete, an' I'll sure bring him back yere."
It was dark when they came, the fire alone lighting up the interior of the dingy cabin with a fitful glow of red flame. I had managed to get out of bed and partially dress myself feeling stronger, and in less pain as I exercised my muscles. They found me seated before the fireplace, indulging in a pot of fresh coffee. Haines was a small, sandy-complexioned man, with a straggling beard and light blue eyes.
He appeared competent enough, a bundle of nervous energy, and yet there was something about the fellow which instantly impressed me unfavorably--probably his short, jerky manner of speech, and his inability to look straight at you.
"Pete has been telling me who you are, Lieutenant," he said, as we shook hands, "and putting some other things together I can guess the rest. You came south on the _Warrior_."
"From Fort Armstrong--yes; who told you this?"
"Captain Thockmorton. I saw him in St. Louis, and he seemed deeply grieved by your sudden disappearance. No one on board was able to explain what had occurred."
"Yet there were two men on the boat who could have explained, if they had cared to do so," I answered drily. "I mean Kirby and Carver; they were the ones who threw me overboard."
He dropped into a chair, his keen, ferret eyes on my face.
"Kirby and Carver? They went ash.o.r.e with the Judge's body at the Landing. So there is a story back of all this," he exclaimed jerkily.
"d.a.m.n it, I thought as much. Was Beaucaire killed?"
"No--not at least by any violence. No doubt the shock of his loss hastened his death. Surely you must know that he risked all he possessed on a game of cards and lost?"
"Thockmorton knew something about it, and there were other rumors floating about the Landing, but I have heard no details."
"You did not see the two men, then?"
"No, I was not at home, and they went on down the river the next day on a keel-boat. You saw the play?"
"I saw the last part of the game and was convinced, as all the others present were, that the Judge was deliberately ruined for a purpose. I believe it was all planned beforehand, but of this we have no tangible proof."
"His opponent was Joe Kirby?"
"And a fellow named Carver, a mere hanger-on."
Haines wet his lips, his eyes narrowing to mere slits, his professional nature coming to the front.
"First, let me ask you why you believe Beaucaire was cheated?" he piped. "I know Joe Kirby, and consider him quite capable of such a trick, but we shall need more than suspicion to circ.u.mvent his scheme."
"I have every reason, Haines, to feel convinced that both Kirby and Carver trailed Beaucaire up the river with the intention of plucking him. Kirby practically confessed this to me, boastingly, afterwards.
All the way down he was bantering the Judge to play. That last night he so manipulated the cards--or rather Carver did, for it was his deal--as to deceive Beaucaire into firmly believing that he held an absolutely unbeatable hand--he was dealt four aces and a king."
The lawyer leaned forward, breathing heavily.
"Four aces! Only one hand is better than that, and it would be impossible to get such a hand out of one pack."
"That is exactly true, Haines. I am no card player, but I do know that much about the game. Yet Kirby took the pot with a straight flush.
Now, either he, or Carver, slipped an extra ace into the pack, or else Beaucaire did. In my opinion the Judge had no chance to work such a trick. And that's the case, as it stands."
Haines jumped to his feet and began pacing the dirt floor excitedly, his hands clasped behind his back.
"By G.o.d, man!" he cried, pausing suddenly. "Even if he did have a chance, the Judge never did it--never. He was a good sport, and always played a straight game. You say he bet everything he had?"
"To the last dollar--Kirby egged him on. Besides the money, a deed to his land, and a bill of sale for his negroes were on the table."
"The field hands, you mean?"
"Yes, and the house servants. Kirby insisted that he write these words, 'This includes every chattel slave legally belonging to me,' and made Beaucaire sign it in that form."
Haines' face was white, his eyes staring at me incredulously.
"G.o.d help us, man! Do you know what that means?" he gasped.
"I am almost afraid I do," I answered, yet startled by his manner.
"That was why I sent for you. Would that include his son's daughter?"
He buried his face in his hands.
"Yes," he confessed brokenly. "To the best of my knowledge Rene Beaucaire is a slave."
CHAPTER VIII
I DECIDE MY DUTY
The silence following this blunt statement was sickening. Up to that moment, in spite of every fact brought to my knowledge, I had secretly believed this condition of affairs impossible. Surely somewhere, through some legal form, Judge Beaucaire had guarded the future safety of this young woman, whom he had admitted into his household. Any other conception seemed impossible, too monstrous, too preposterous for consideration. But now the solemn words of the lawyer, his own legal counselor, brought conviction, and for the moment all power of speech deserted me. It was actually true then--the girl was a slave, a thing belonging to Kirby. Nothing broke the stillness within the cabin, except the sharp crackling of flames in the open fireplace, and the heavy breathing of the negro. He was seated on the edge of the bed, his black face showing a greenish tint, and revealing puzzled amazement, with wide-opened eyes staring blankly at Haines, who stood motionless before the fire.
"Whut wus dat yer sed, Mister Haines?" he asked thickly. "You say as how Missus Rene Beaucaire is a slave, sah? Pears like I don't just rightfully understan'."
"Still that is true, Pete," and the lawyer lifted his head and surveyed us both. "She is the illegitimate daughter of Delia, Judge Beaucaire's housekeeper; her father was Adelbert Beaucaire, the Judge's only son.
No one knows where he is, dead or alive."
"De good Lord! An' de ol' Jedge never set her free?"
The lawyer shook his head, words evidently failing him.
"But are you absolutely certain of this?" I broke in impatiently.
"Have you searched the records?"
"Not only searched them, Knox, but, before he left for the north on this last trip, Beaucaire was in my office, and I practically forced him to acknowledge the negligence. He even authorized me to draw up the necessary papers for him to sign on his return--for both Delia and the girl. They are in my desk now, unexecuted. There is no mistake--Rene is legally a slave, together with her mother."
"My G.o.d!" I exclaimed. "What an indictment of slavery. Could anyone conceive a more horrible position! Here is a young girl, educated, refined, of more than ordinary attractiveness Thockmorton tells me, brought up amid every comfort, and led to believe herself the honored daughter of the house, awakening in an instant to the fact that she is a slave, with negro blood in her veins--a mere chattel, owned body and soul by a gambler, won in a card game, and to be sold to the highest bidder. Haines, I tell you Kirby knew all this."
"Kirby knew? Why do you say that?"
"He boasted of it. I thought little about what he said at the time, but I believe now one of his main objects was to gain possession of this girl. That would account for his insistence upon that peculiar clause in the bill of sale--he either suspected, or had discovered through some source, that Rene Beaucaire had never been set free. For some reason he desired possession of both Beaucaire girls; they meant more to him than either the money or the property. This card game gave him one; the other--"