Deadwood Dick, The Prince of the Road Part 18
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It was a quaint Scottish melody,--rich in its honeyed meaning, sweetly weird and pitiful; wonderfully soothing and nouris.h.i.+ng to a weeping spirit.
Clear and flute-like the maiden's cultured voice swelled out on the still night air, and the mountain echoes caught up the strains and lent a wild peculiar accompaniment.
Deadwood d.i.c.k listened, with his head still bowed, and his hands clasped about one knee;--listened in a kind of fascination, until the last reverberations of the song had died out in a wailing echo; then he sprung abruptly to his feet, drew one hand wearily across the masked brow; raised his sombrero with a deft movement, and bowed himself out--out into the night, where the moon and stars looked down at him, perhaps with more lenience than on some.
Alice Terry rose from her seat, crossed over to the door, and gazed after the straight handsome form, until it had mingled with the other road-agents, who had camped upon the slope. Then she turned about, and sat down on the couch beside Anita.
"You are still, dear," she said, stroking the other's long, unconfined hair. "Are you lonely? If not why don't you say something?"
"I have nothing to say," replied Anita, a sad, sweet smile playing over her features. "I have been too much taken up with the music to think of talking."
"But, you are seldom talkative."
"So brother used to tell me. He said I had lost my heart, and tongue."
Redburn was drumming on the window-casing with his fingers;--a sort of lonely tattoo it was.
"You seemed to be much interested in the outlaw. Miss Terry," he observed, as if by chance the thought had just occurred to him, when, in reality, he was downright jealous. "Had you two ever met--"
"Certainly not, sir," and Alice flashed him an inquiring glance. "Why do you ask?"
"Oh! for no reason, in particular, only I fancied that song was meant especially for him."
Redburn, afterward, would have given a hundred dollars to have recalled those words, for the haughty, half-indignant look Alice gave him instantly showed him he was on the wrong track.
If he wished to court her favor, it must be in a different way, and he must not again give her a glimpse of his jealous nature.
"You spoke of a brother," said Alice, turning to Anita. "Does he live here with you?"
"Yes, when not away on business. He has now been absent for over a month."
"Indeed! Is he as sweet, sad, and silent as yourself?"
"Oh! no; Ned is unlike me; he is buoyant, cheerful, pleasant."
"Ned? What is his full name, dear?"
"Edward Harris."
Alice grew suddenly pale and speechless, as she remembered the handsome young miner whom Fearless Frank had slain in the duel, just outside of Deadwood. This, then, was his sister; and evidently she as yet knew nothing of his sad fate.
"Do you know aught concerning Edward Harris?" Redburn asked, seeing her agitation. Alice considered a moment.
"I do," she answered, at last. "This Fearless Frank, whom I came here with, had a duel with a man, just above Deadwood, whose name was Edward Harris!"
"My G.o.d;--and his fate--?"
"He was instantly killed, and left lying where he dropped!"
There was a scream of agony, just here, and a heavy fall.
Anita had fainted!
CHAPTER XIV.
THE TRANSIENT TRIUMPH.
Redburn sprung from his seat, ran over to her side, and raised her tenderly in his arms.
"Poor thing!" he murmured, gazing into her pale, still face, "the shock was too much for her. No wonder she fainted." He laid her on the couch, and kept off the others who crowded around.
"Bring cold water!" he ordered, "and I will soon have her out of this fit."
Alice hastened to obey, and Anita's face and hands were bathed in the cooling liquid until she began to show signs of returning consciousness.
"You may now give me the particulars of the affair," Redburn said, rising and closing the door, for a chilly breeze was sweeping into the cabin.
Alice proceeded to comply with his request by narrating what had occurred and, as nearly as possible, what had been said. When she had concluded, he gazed down for several moments thoughtfully into the face of Anita. There was much yet that was beyond his powers of comprehension--a knotty problem for which he saw no immediate solution.
"What do you think about it, "General"?" he asked, turning to the mine-locater. "Have we sufficient evidence to hang this devil in scarlet?"
"Hardly, boyee, hardly. 'Peers te me, 'cordin' to ther gal's tell, thet thar war a fair shake all around, an' as duelin' ar' more or less ther fashun 'round these parts,--considera'bly more o' less 'n less o'
more--et ain't law-fell ter yank a critter up by ther throat!"
"I know it is not, according to the customs of this country of the Black Hills; but, look at it. That fellow, who I am satisfied is a black-hearted knave, has not only taken the life of poor Harris, but, very probably, has given his sister her death-blow. The question is: should he go unpunished in the face of all this evidence?"
"Yes. Let him go; _I_ will be the one to punish him!"
It was Anita who spoke. She had partly arisen on the couch; her face was streaked with water and slightly haggard; her hair blew unconfined about her neck and shoulders; her eyes blazed with a wild, almost savage fire.
"Let him go!" she repeated, more of fierceness in her voice than Redburn had ever heard there, before. "He shall not escape my vengeance. Oh, my poor, poor dead brother!"
She flung herself back upon the couch, and gave herself up to a wild, pa.s.sionate, uncontrollable outburst of tears and sobs--the wailings of a sorrowing heart. For a long time she continued to weep and sob violently; then came a lull, during which she fell asleep, from exhaustion--a deep sleep. Redburn and Alice then carried her into an adjoining room, where she was left under the latter's skillful care.
Awhile later the cabin was wrapped in silence.
When morning sunlight next peeped down into the Flower Pocket, it found everything generally astir. Anita was up and pursuing her household duties, but she was calm, now, even sadder than before, making a strange contrast to blithe, gaysome Alice, who flitted about, here and there, like some bright-winged b.u.t.terfly surrounded by a halo of perpetual suns.h.i.+ne.
Unknown to any one save themselves, two men were within the valley of the Flower Pocket gold-mines--there on business, and that business meant bloodshed. They were secreted in among the foothills on the western side of the flowering paradise, at a point where they were not observed, and at the same time were the observers of all that was going on in front of them.
How came they here, when the hand of Deadwood d.i.c.k guarded the only accessible entrance there was to the valley? The answer was: they came secretly through the pa.s.s on the night preceding the arrival of the road-agents, and had been lying in close concealment ever since.
Deadwood Dick, The Prince of the Road Part 18
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Deadwood Dick, The Prince of the Road Part 18 summary
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