The Bronze Bell Part 13
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"How's that? It's hours till morning."
"I shall never see the dawn, David," said Rutton quietly.
"What--"
"I have but ten minutes more of life.... If you must know--in a word: poison.... That I be saved a blacker sin, David!"
"You mean that medicine--the silver phial?" Amber stammered, sick with horror.
"Yes. Don't be alarmed; it's slow but sure and painless, dear boy. It works infallibly within half an hour. There'll be no agony--merely the drawing of the curtain. Best of all, it leaves no traces; a diagnostician would call it heart-failure.... And thus I escape that."
He nodded coolly toward the door.
"But this must not be, Rutton!" Amber rose suddenly, pus.h.i.+ng back his chair. "Something must be done. Doggott--"
"Not so loud, please--you might alarm him. After it's all over, call him. But now--it's useless; the thing is done; there's no known antidote. Be kind to me, David, in this hour of mine extremity. There's much still to be said between us ... and in seven minutes more...."
Rutton retained his clutch upon Amber's hand; and his eyes, their l.u.s.tre dimmed, held Amber's, pitiful, pa.s.sionate, inexorable in their entreaty. Amber sat down, his soul shaken with the pity of it.
"Ah-h!" sighed Rutton. Relieved, the tension relaxed; he released Amber's hand; his body sank a little in the chair. Becoming conscious of this, he pulled himself together.... "Enter India by way of Calcutta," he said in a dull and heavy voice. "There, in the Machua Bazaar, you will find a goldsmith and money-lender called Dhola Baksh.
Go to him secretly, show him the ring--the Token. He will understand and do all in his power to aid you, should there be any trouble about your leaving with Sophia. To no one else in India are you to mention my name. Deny me, if taxed with knowing me. Do you understand?"
"No. Why?"
"Never mind--but remember these two things: you do not know me and you must under no circ.u.mstances have anything to do with the police. They could do nothing to help you; on the other hand, to be seen with them, to have it known that you communicate with them, would be the equivalent of a seal upon your death warrant. You remember the money-lender's name?"
"Dhola Baksh of the Machua Bazaar."
"Trust him--and trust Doggott.... Four minutes more!"
"Rutton!" cried Amber in a broken voice. Cold sweat broke out upon his forehead.
The man smiled fearlessly. "Believe me, this is the better way--the only way.... Some day you may meet a little chap named Labertouche--a queer fish I once knew in Calcutta. But I daresay he's dead by now. But if you should meet him, tell him that you've seen his B-Formula work flawlessly in one instance at least. You see, he dabbled in chemistry and entomology and a lot of uncommon pursuits--a solicitor by profession, he never seemed to have any practice to speak of--and he invented this stuff and named it the B-Formula." Rutton tapped the silver phial in his waistcoat pocket, smiling faintly. "He was a good little man.... Two minutes. Strange how little one cares, when it's inevitable...."
He ceased to speak and closed his eyes. A great stillness made itself felt within the room. In the other, Doggott was silent--probably asleep. Amber noted the fact subconsciously, even as he was aware that the high fury of the wind was moderating. But consciously he was bowed down with sorrow, inexpressibly racked.
In the hush the metallic hammering of the mean tin clock rang loud and harsh; Amber's heart seemed to beat in funeral time to its steady, unhurried, immutable ticking.
It was close upon two in the morning.
"Amber," said Rutton suddenly and very clearly, "you'll find a will in my despatch box. Doggott is to have all I possess. The emerald ring--the Token--I give to you."
"Yes, I--I--"
"Your hand.... Mine is cold? No? I fancied it was," said the man drowsily. And later: "Sophia. You will be kind to her, David?"
"On my faith!"
Rutton's fingers tightened cruelly upon his, then relaxed suddenly. He began to nod, his chin drooping toward his breast.
"The Gateway ... the Bell...."
The words were no more than whispers dying on lips that stilled as they spoke. For a long time Amber sat unmoving, his fingers imprisoned in that quiet, cooling grasp, his thoughts astray in a black mist of mourning and bewilderment.
Through the hush of death the tin clock ticked on, placidly, monotonously, complacently. In the fireplace a charred log broke with a crash and a shower of live cinders.
Out of doors something made a circuit of the cabin, like a beast of the night, stealthy footsteps m.u.f.fled by the snow: _pad--pad--pad_....
In the emerald ring on Amber's finger the deathless fire leaped and pulsed.
CHAPTER VI
RED DAWN
Presently Amber rose and quietly exchanged dressing-gown and slippers for his own shooting-jacket and boots--which by now were dry, thanks to Doggott's thoughtfulness in placing them near the fire.
The shabby tin clock had droned through thirty minutes since Rutton had spoken his last word. In that interval, sitting face to face, and for a little time hand in hand, with the man to whom he had pledged his honour, Amber had thought deeply, carefully weighing ways and means; nor did he move until he believed his plans mature and definite.
But before he could take one step toward redeeming his word to Rutton, he had many cares to dispose of. In the hut, Rutton lay dead of poison; somewhere amongst the dunes the babu lay in his blood, shot to death--foully murdered, the world would say. Should these things become known, he would be detained indefinitely in Nokomis as a witness--if, indeed, he escaped a graver charge.
It was, then, with a mind burdened with black anxiety that he went to arouse Doggott.
The rear room proved to be as cheerless as the other. Of approximately the same dimensions, it too had been furnished with little regard for anything but the barest conveniences of camp-life. It contained a small sheet-iron stove for cooking, a table, a rack of shelves, two chairs, and a rickety cot-bed in addition to another trunk. On the table a tin kerosene-lamp had burned low, poisoning the air with its bitter reek.
On the cot Doggott sprawled in his clothing, his strained position--half reclining, feet upon the floor--suggesting an uncontemplated surrender to fatigue. His face was flushed and he was breathing heavily.
The Virginian stood over him for several minutes before he could bring himself to the point of awakening the man to the news of Rutton's death. Aware of that steadfast loyalty which Doggott had borne his master through many years of service, he shrank with conceivable reluctance from the duty. But necessity drove him with a taut rein; and finally he bent over and shook the sleeper by the shoulder.
With a jerk the man sat up and recognised Amber.
"Beg pardon, sir," he muttered, lifting himself sluggishly; "I didn't mean to fall asleep--I'd only sat down for a moment's rest. Has--has anything gone bad, sir?" he added hastily, remarking with troubled eyes the sympathy and concern in Amber's expression.
Amber looked away. "Mr. Rutton is dead, Doggott," he managed to say with some difficulty.
Doggott exclaimed beneath his breath. "Dead!" he cried in a tone of daze. In two strides he had left Amber and was kneeling by Rutton's side. The most cursory examination, however, sufficed to resolve his every doubt: the hanging head and arms, the livid face with its staring yet sightless eyes, the shrunken figure seeming so pitifully slight and unsubstantial in comparison with its accustomed strong and virile poise, hopelessly confirmed Amber's statement.
"Dead!" whispered the servant. He rose and stood swaying, his lips a-tremble, his eyes blinking through a mist, his head bowed. "'E always was uncommon' good to me, Mr. Amber," he said brokenly. "It's a bit 'ard, comin' this w'y. 'Ow--'ow did it--" He broke down completely for a time, and staggered away to the wall, there to stand with his head pillowed on his crossed forearms.
When he had himself in more control Amber told him as briefly as possible of the head at the window and of its sequel--Rutton's despairing suicide.
Doggott listened in silence, nodding his comprehension. "I've always looked for it, sir," he commented. "'E'd warned me never to touch that silver tube; 'e never said poison, but I suspected it, 'e being blue and melancholy-like, by fits and turns--'e never told me why."
Then, reverently, they took up the body and laid it out upon the hammock-bed, Doggott arranging the limbs and closing the eyes before spreading a sheet over the rigid form.
"And now, what, Mr. Amber?" he asked.
The Bronze Bell Part 13
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The Bronze Bell Part 13 summary
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