Part 30 (2/2)
”Don't be too sure of it, friend,” observed the captain. ”The Lord never deserts those who fully believe and trust him. Those villains may be defeated yet.”
The outlaw grinned as he looked around the room. ”My dear friends are badly fooled,” he chuckled with glee. ”They believe the chief is with you, and he is not here. Why, they have already spent, in imagination, the money that they are going to derive from the sale of his plumes.
What a shock it will be to them when they learn that the bird has flown. I wish I could see their faces when they hear the news.”
”The chief is dead,” said Walter, ”do you think they would go away if they knew the truth?”
”No, I do not,” replied Ritter, after a moment's thought, ”in spite of all you might say, they would have a suspicion that you had secured the plumes yourselves, and, anyway, they are so mad that they will not leave until they have finished the job.”
The hunters were favorably impressed with the frankness of the former outlaw. He had the speech and the manners of a gentleman, and his earnestness and apparent sincerity went far towards removing their suspicions, and, much to their surprise, they found themselves soon talking to him with the freedom of old acquaintances.
Ritter chuckled with delight when they told him of the young chief going for aid. ”That gives us a fighting chance,” he declared, joyfully. ”We must put ourselves on short rations and try to hold out until they come.”
”Where is Indian Charley?” asked Walter, ”is he with the others?”
”No, they could not induce him to set foot on the island. The place evidently has a bad name among the Indians and I am not surprised after what I have seen. Even the convicts are puzzled and a little alarmed by the walls, courts, and buildings. They none of them know enough about history to lay them to the Spaniards as you folks have probably done. Charley, the Indian, swears that there is a mysterious bell which tolls every night. Have you heard anything of the kind?”
Walter briefly related their adventure with the bell-ringer, omitting any reference to the captain's superst.i.tious fears, much to the old sailor's relief.
Further conversation was interrupted by darkness and preparations for the night.
Chris built a little fire near the door where the smoke would pa.s.s out through the cracks and prepared a stew of venison and some broth for Charley.
Taking turns the besieged made a hearty meal which did wonders in renewing hope and courage.
It was decided that they should take short s.h.i.+fts of watching during the night, two in each watch. It fell to Walter to share the watch with the young outlaw, for which he was not at all displeased, for he was greatly interested in the strange character, and their turns at the watch pa.s.sed quickly in pleasant conversation.
The outlaw spoke freely of the incident that had brought him to the convict gang, claiming firmly that the deed which had made him a felon had been done in self-defense, but, owing to lack of witnesses and to a well-known enmity between him and the dead man, the jury had brought in a verdict of murder in the second degree.
Walter, under the spell of the man's attractive, strong personality, could not but believe his a.s.sertion.
At the end of their watch, Walter awoke Chris and the captain and stretched out for a nap, but the outlaw never closed his eyes during the long uneventful night. When not watching, he was hovering over Charley's bedside administering medicine or working over the bitten leg. Yet daylight found him as cool and fresh as ever, apparently unaffected by his long vigil.
To the hunters' great delight, day found Charley visibly improved. He had fallen into a deep sleep, his body was wet with profuse perspiration, and the swelling of the limb had greatly decreased.
They showered thanks upon the outlaw until he was visibly embarra.s.sed and begged them to say no more.
The morning pa.s.sed as had the night, without any hostile demonstration by the convicts. Smoke curling up from the fort and from a building on the other side of them told the besieged that the enemy had taken up their positions during the night as Ritter had prophesied. Evidently they were willing to wait for their triumph rather than risk any lives by trying to take their victims by a.s.sault.
When Chris started to make a stew for dinner, Ritter stopped him. ”We can't spare any more water for cooking,” he declared. ”I have used a good deal on the patient, and the gourds are already almost empty. Our only hope of life is in husbanding our water and it would be wise to put ourselves on an allowance now. I figure that there is enough in that big copper to allow each of us a pint and a half per day for ten days.”
The others saw the wisdom of his proposal and immediately agreed to it, and they made their dinner of roasted yams, smoked venison broiled before the fire, and a few swallows of water.
Once during the afternoon a convict tried a shot at a crack between the posts barricading the window. The bullet pa.s.sed through, missing Ritter's head by a scant two inches. The former outlaw never winced but began singing mockingly, ”Teasing, teasing, I was only teasing you.”
A perfect storm of bullets answered his taunt.
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