Part 34 (1/2)
Unnoted by all but one of the company, she slipt to a seat in the shadow of her father's burly shoulders. He was leaning forward, talking to the Governor, who sat very erect, his features fixed in an expression of dogged determination. The Surveyor-General sat well behind the table, and upon the polished wood before him lay a little heap of torn petals and broken stems. At the far end of the room and leaning heavily against the wall was the prisoner whose examination was just finished.
Sir Charles had seen the entrance of the lady of the manor, and he now rose from his seat and came to her. ”Not a syllable,” he whispered in answer to the question in her eyes. ”Roundhead obstinacy! But I think that this fellow will prove more malleable.”
His prediction was verified. Ten minutes later the Governor rose to his feet triumphant. ”So!” he said, drawing a long breath. ”We are, I think, gentlemen, at the very core at last. The time, day after to-morrow; the place, Poplar Spring in this county. And now to work! Those of these d--d Oliverians whom we can reach must be arrested at once. Swift messengers must be sent to all plantations far and near. The trainbands must be called out. Time presses, gentlemen!”
”And these men?” said the Colonel.
”Must go to Jamestown gaol, where the one shall hang as surely as my name is William Berkeley. For the other--”
”Your Excellency has promised me my life,” said Trail cringingly, but with an inscrutable something that was not fear in his sinister green eyes.
”An escort must be gotten together,” said the Colonel, ”and the day is far advanced. I advise keeping them here until the morning.”
”See that you keep them straitly then,” said the Governor.
”Trust me for that, your Excellency,” said the overseer grimly.
”Then to work, gentlemen,” cried the Governor, ”for there is much to do and but little time to do it in. Major Carrington, you with Mr. Peyton will ride with me to Jamestown. Colonel Verney, you will know what measures to take for the safety of your s.h.i.+re. Woodson, have the horses brought around at once.”
The Council broke up in haste and confusion, and its members, talking eagerly, streamed into the hall. Carrington was the last in line, and he paused before Landless. The under overseer and the slave Regulus were at a little distance replacing the cords about Trail's arms. The Surveyor-General cast a quick glance towards the door, saw that the last retreating figure was that of Mr. Peyton, and approached his lips close to Landless's ear.
”You are a brave man,” he said in a low and troubled voice. ”From my soul I honor you! I would have saved you, would save you now if I could.
But I am cruelly placed.”
”I have no hope for this life--and no fear,” said Landless calmly.
Carrington paused irresolute, and a flush rose to his face. ”I would like to hear you say that you do not blame me,” he said at last with an effort.
”I do not blame you,” said Landless.
Woodson appeared in the doorway. ”The Governor is waiting, Major Carrington.”
”If I can do ought to help you, I will,” said Carrington hastily, and left the room. A moment later came the jingling of reins and the sound of rapid hoofs quickening into the planter's pace as the Governor and the Surveyor-General whirled away.
CHAPTER XXIV
A MESSAGE
In an unused attic room of the great house lay G.o.dfrey Landless, cords about his ankles, and his arms bound to his sides by cords and by a thick rope, one end of which was fastened to a beam on the wall. He was alone, for the Muggletonian, Havisham and Trail were confined in the overseer's house. Opposite him was a small window framing a square of sky. He had watched light clouds drift across it, and the sun pa.s.s slowly and majestically down it, and the sunset turn the clouds into floating blood-red plumes. He had been there since noon. Thick walls kept from him all sound in the house below--it might have been a house of the dead. Through the closed window came the low, incessant hum of the summer world without, but no unusual noise. He had heard the sunset horn, and the song of the slaves coming from the fields, and as dusk began to fall, the cry of a whip-poor-will.
When the door had closed upon the retreating figures of the men who brought him there, he had thrown himself upon the floor where he lay, faint from physical anguish, in a stupor of misery, conscious only of a sick longing for death. This mood had pa.s.sed and he was himself again.
As he lay with his eyes following the fiery, s.h.i.+fting feathers of cloud, he remembered that the gaol at Jamestown faced the south, and he thought, ”This is the last sunset I shall ever see.” He had the strong abiding faith of his time and party, and he looked beyond the clouds with an awe and a light in his eyes. Verses learnt at his mother's knee came back to him; he said them over to himself, and the tender, solemn, beneficent words fell like balm upon his troubled heart. He thought of his mother who had died young, and then of scenes and occurrences of his childhood. All earthly hope was past, there could be no more struggling; in a little while he would be dead. Dying, his mind reverted, not to the sordid misery from which death would set him free, but to the long past, to the child at the mother's knee, to the boy who had climbed down great cliffs in search of a smuggler's cave. The unearthly light that rests upon that time so far behind us shone strong for him--he saw every twig in the rooks' nests in the lofty elms, every ivy leaf about a ruined oriel, black against a gold sky; the cool, dark smell of the box alleys filled his nostrils; the sound of the sea came to him; he heard his mother singing on the terrace. He bowed his face with a sudden rain of tender, not sorrowful, tears.
Something crashed in at the window, splintering the coa.r.s.e gla.s.s and falling upon the floor at a little distance from him. It was a large pebble, to which was tied a piece of paper. He started up and made for it, to be brought up within two feet of it by the tug of the rope which bound him to the wall. He thought a moment, then lay down upon the floor and found that he could touch the end of the string that tied the paper to the pebble. He took it between his teeth and slowly drew it towards him, then, rising to his knees, he strained with all his might at the cords that bound his arms. They were tightly drawn, but when at length he desisted, panting, he had so loosened them that he could move one hand a very little way. With it and with his teeth he disengaged the paper from the pebble and spread it upon his knee. There was just light enough to read the sprawling schoolboy hand with which it was covered.
It ran thus:--
”I don't know as this will ever reach you. I am doing all I can. Luiz Sebastian has not let me get at arm's length from him since I overheard him and the Turk, and a sailor from Captain Laramore's s.h.i.+p and _Roach_ at the hut on the marsh, two hours ago. They would have killed me there, but I ran, and he did not catch me until I was almost to the quarters.