Part 8 (2/2)

The grave must be less than a rod below it.

With a heart beating with great strangling throbs, he paced off the distance, and then stood quite still, holding his lantern down close to the frozen earth.

For an instant his heart almost ceased beating--there was no sign of the little mound, with the leafless branch of bush he had been so careful to place there.

Then, suddenly a moan from beneath his very feet fell upon his ear, causing him to fairly gasp for breath.

”Thank G.o.d! I have found it!” he cried.

In an instant he had thrown off his coat, thin though it was, and set to work as he had never worked in all his life before--against time.

He had thrown in the earth loosely, taking care to leave the head exposed, for he felt as sure as he did of his own existence that life was not yet extinct in the body of the young girl for whom he was forced to prepare that grave at the point of a revolver in the hands of the two desperate strangers.

He had taken his own life in his hands when he had announced the work finished satisfactorily, for had the man stepped from the coach to examine the work he would have found the deep hole which left the head uncovered.

The cold winds and the drifting snow blew into the old grave digger's face, but he worked on with desperate zeal, realizing that another life might depend upon the swiftness of his rescue.

At last, after what seemed to him an eternity of time, he reached the body, and quickly lifted it from its resting place.

Half an hour later he reached his own humble cottage home, bearing the slender burden in his strong arms.

His good wife had waited up for him. She could never sleep when Adam was away from home.

She heard his footstep on the crunching snow and hastened to open the door for him, starting back with a cry of great surprise as she caught sight of the figure in his arms.

”Is it some neighbor's little girl lost in the storm, Adam?” she cried, clasping her hands together in affright.

”Don't ask any questions now, Mary,” he exclaimed, delivering the burden into her willing, motherly arms, and sinking down into the nearest chair, thoroughly exhausted. ”I'll tell you all about it later, when I get my breath and my nerves are settled. Do everything you can to revive the poor young creature. She is freezing to death.”

As old Adam's kindly wife threw back the dark cloak which had enveloped the fair young face and form, an exclamation of surprise broke from her wondering lips.

”She is a stranger hereabouts,” she observed, but she wisely obeyed her husband's injunctions, making no further remark, knowing she would hear all about it in good time.

In less time than it takes to tell it, the beautiful young stranger was put to bed in the little spare room up under the eaves, wrapped in flannel blankets, with bottles of hot water at the feet, and a generous draught of brandy, which the grave digger's wife always kept in the house for emergencies, forced down her throat.

”She will soon return to consciousness now,” she exclaimed to her husband, who stood beside the bedside anxiously watching her labors; ”see that flush on her cheeks. We will sit down quietly and wait until she opens her eyes. It won't be long.”

And while they waited thus, Adam told his wife the story he had to tell concerning the young girl--this fair, hapless, beautiful young stranger whose wedding he had witnessed and burial he had a.s.sisted in within the hour, first binding his wife to solemn secrecy.

The good woman's amazement as she listened can better be imagined than described. For once in her life she was too dumfounded to offer even a theory.

As they glanced toward the bed, to their amazement they saw the girl's eyes fastened upon old Adam with an expression of horror in them, heartrending to behold, and they realized that she had heard every word he had said.

In an instant they were on their feet bending over the couch.

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