Part 2 (1/2)
Bang went the ready rifle with sharp, sullen roar that woke the echoes across the valley. Bang again, as Leary sent a second shot after the first. Then, as the captain came panting to the spot, they followed up the road. No sign of the runner. Attracted by the shots, the sergeant of the guard and one or two men, lantern-bearing, came running to the scene. Excitedly they searched up and down the road in mingled hope and dread of finding the body of the marauder, or some clue or trace.
Nothing! Whoever he was, the fleet runner had vanished and made good his escape.
”Who could it have been, sir?” asked the sergeant of the officer of the day. ”Surely none of the men ever come round this way.”
”I don't know, sergeant; I don't know. Just take your lamp and see if there is anything visible down there among the rocks. He may have been hit and leaped the wall.--Do you think you hit him, Leary?”
”I can't say, sor. He came by me like a flash. I had just a second's look at him, and--Sure I niver saw such runnin'.”
”Could you see his face?” asked Chester, in a low tone, as the other men moved away to search the rocks.
”Not his face, sor. 'Twas too dark.”
”Was there--did he look like anybody you knew, or had seen?--anybody in the command?”
”Well, sor, not among the men, that is. There's none so tall and slim both, and so light. Sure he must 'a' worn gums, sor. You couldn't hear the whisper of a footfall.”
”But whom did he _seem_ to resemble?”
”Well, if the captain will forgive me, sor, it's unwillin' I am to say the worrd, but there's no one that tall and light and slim here, sor, but Loot'nant Jerrold. Sure it couldn't be him, sor.”
”Leary, will you promise me something on your word as a man?”
”I will, sor.”
”Say not one word of this matter to any one, except I tell you, or you have to, before a court.”
”I promise, sor.”
”And I believe you. Tell the sergeant I will soon be back.”
With that he turned and walked down the road until once more he came to the plank crossing and the pa.s.sage-way between the colonel's and Bachelors' Row. Here again he stopped short, and waited with bated breath and scarcely-beating heart. The faint light he had seen before again illumined the room and cast its gleam upon the old gray wall. Even as he gazed, there came silently to the window a tall, white-robed form, and a slender white hand seized and lowered the shade, noiselessly.
Then, as before, the light faded away; but--she was awake.
Waiting one moment in silence, Captain Chester then sprang up the wooden steps and pa.s.sed under the piazza which ran the length of the bachelor quarters. Half-way down the row he turned sharply to his left, opened the green-painted door, and stood in a little dark hall-way. Taking his match-box from his pocket, he struck a light, and by its glare quickly read the card upon the first door-way to his right:
”MR. HOWARD F. JERROLD,
”----_th Infantry, U.S.A._”
Opening this door, he bolted straight through the little parlor to the bedroom in the rear. A dim light was burning on the mantel. The bed was unruffled, untouched, and Mr. Jerrold was not there.
Five minutes afterwards, Captain Chester, all alone, had laboriously and cautiously dragged the ladder from the side to the rear of the colonel's house, stretched it in the roadway where he had first stumbled upon it, then returned to the searching-party on ”Number Five.”
”Send two men to put that ladder back,” he ordered. ”It is where I told you,--on the road behind the colonel's.”
III.
When Mrs. Maynard came to Sibley in May and the officers with their wives were making their welcoming call, she had with motherly pride and pleasure yielded to their constant importunities and shown to one party after another an alb.u.m of photographs,--likenesses of her only daughter.
There were little _cartes de visite_ representing her in long dresses and baby-caps; quaint little pictures of a chubby-faced, chubby-legged infant a few months older; charming studies of a little girl with great black eyes and delicate features; then of a tall, slender slip of a maiden, decidedly foreign-looking; then of a sweet and pensive face, with great dark eyes, long, beautiful curling lashes, and very heavy, low-arched brows, exquisitely moulded mouth and chin, and most luxuriant dark hair; then others, still older, in every variety of dress,--even in fancy costume, such as the girl had worn at fair or masquerade. These and others still had Mrs. Maynard shown them, with repressed pride and pleasure and with sweet acknowledgment of their enthusiastic praises.
Alice still tarried in the East, visiting relatives whom she had not seen since her father's death three years earlier, and, long before she came to join her mother at Sibley and to enter upon the life she so eagerly looked forward to, ”'way out in the West, you know, with officers and soldiers and the band, and buffalo and Indians all around you,” there was not an officer or an officer's wife who had not delightedly examined that alb.u.m. There was still another picture, but that one had been shown to only a chosen few just one week after her daughter's arrival, and rather an absurd scene had occurred, in which that most estimable officer, Lieutenant Sloat, had figured as the hero.