CHAPTER XVII.

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Belinda Himes was still in hiding in the cave on the river-bank where she had taken refuge at the first. She found it a doleful abode, but scarcely dared venture from it except under cover of the night, when with the owl and the bat she sallied forth from her lair to prowl about the country in search of food. The supply she had taken with her from the raft had long since become exhausted, and she was on the verge of starvation.

Thus pressed by hunger, she visited fields, gardens, and hen-roosts by night, appropriating to her own use such eggs, vegetables, and fruits as she could lay hands upon and carry away—sometimes even going so far as to abstract a young chicken.

Fortunately there were fish in the river, and having found rod, line, and a hook or two on the raft, she was able occasionally to catch one. So she managed to keep soul and body together, yet not very much more than that.

It was a dreadful life she led—a life filled with terror, remorse, and despair. Afraid to be seen by mortal eye, she crouched in her dark, damp, unwholesome den through the long, bright summer days, shut away from all the beauty and fragrance that gladdened the hearts and lives of those whom sin and crime did not compel to hide from the light of the sun, and away from the companionship of their kind.

Oh, how wearily the days and nights dragged along! Life under such conditions seemed little worth, yet death a thing to shrink from in wild affright.

She saw no one and knew nothing of passing events. She supposed her husband was still living, and wondered if, when he should be able to be about again, he would make an effort to find her, and have her brought to trial for the crime of which he had accused her.

She thought much of Phelim, and longed to see and talk with him; but it did not seem likely they would ever meet again; if convicted, he would doubtless be given a long term in the penitentiary; perhaps it would be a life sentence. She was glad it could be nothing worse; hanging was, to her way of thinking, far more to be dreaded.

She would have gone to Prairieville and to the jail, seeking an interview with him, could she have done so with safety to herself; but she dared not, lest she should be made to share his imprisonment, both there and in the State prison.

One day—the same on which Captain Charlton carried to Miriam the news that Himes had made a will in her favor—Belinda, lying asleep in her cave, was awakened by the sound of voices at the foot of the bank. She started with affright, a cold perspiration bursting out all over her, and her heart beating wildly. She thought they were climbing up to her retreat; perhaps had dogged her steps as she returned to it some hours before, and had come to arrest her.

But after listening intently for a few minutes, she decided that they were stationary; probably seated near the water’s edge and engaged in fishing, which was indeed the case.

Then she lay down again with her ear close to the overhanging vines, that she might catch every word of their talk.

They were speaking of Mr. Himes, and as she listened with breathless interest, she presently learned of the second and successful attempt upon his life. She drew a breath of relief, as she remembered that he would have been the principal witness against Phelim.

But what were they saying now? That Phelim was suspected of having instigated the murder, and that there was talk of lynching him, as Bangs had been lynched only the day before for shooting Barney Nolan down dead.

Horrible! horrible! She was almost wild with terror on Phelim’s account. Oh, if she could only warn him! if she could only help him to escape from the jail before the lynchers got there!

Alas! that was impossible; but perhaps there would be no attempt to harm him, and if she were in that neighborhood she might go near to the jail in the night, when his keepers would be asleep, and in some way attract his attention, so that he would come to his cell window and speak to her. She would venture a good deal even to hear his voice.

She fell asleep while thinking of it, for she was weary with the wanderings of the past night, and must wait for the sheltering wing of darkness before setting out upon the contemplated journey; and she had no preparation to make in the way of packing, except to gather together her few possessions into a small bundle that she could carry in her hand.

She rested through the remainder of the day, and when the sunset glow had faded from the sky, and darkness began creeping over the landscape, crawled from her hiding-place and started upon her toilsome tramp, following the course of the river, which she knew would finally bring her to her destination.

There was a more direct route, but she was not acquainted with it, and dared not make inquiries.

Feeble from mental suffering and lack of sufficient nourishment, she could not travel fast. Two nights of journeying, lying by during the days, brought her at last to the vicinity of Prairieville.

Day was breaking when she arrived. She lay concealed in the woods through that day and evening, till nearly every light in the town was extinguished, excepting the street lamps, then made her way cautiously to the jail, which stood upon the outskirts, partly surrounded by a grove of trees.

All was darkness and silence there; probably keeper and prisoners were asleep.

Slowly she made the circuit of the building, gazing up at the grated windows and trying to conjecture which was the one belonging to Phelim’s cell.

She possessed no clew to it, and even could she decide which it was, how was she to attract his attention without betraying her vicinity to others?

Suddenly she remembered that she could imitate very closely the note of the katydid, and that Phelim had once heard her doing so, and complimented her on the accomplishment. She tried it now, stationing herself opposite a cell window, which, as it happened, was the one she sought.

She had repeated the note several times, when at last it was answered in kind; then a voice, speaking in suppressed tones, asked, “Is it yersilf, me darlint?”

“Yes, it’s me, Phalim,” she replied, in a joyous whisper, stepping close under the window as she spoke. “Oh, if I could only help you out o’ that!”

“Who knows but mabbe ye kin in toime, me jewel,” he said. “We’ll set our wits to wurruk, me darlint. If I had a file now, to hilp me to git rid o’ wan or two o’ these bars, it’s not so hard ’twud be to break jail. Thin we’d fly the counthry together, an’ lave throuble behind us.”

“I’d risk anything to help you,” she responded, “but how or where I could get a file I don’t see, for I daren’t venture to show myself to a livin’ soul.”

“Is that so, me jewel? But what fer darsen’t ye?”

“Because he swore I’d a hand in robbin’ an’ murderin’ him.”

“Who? that ould divil Himes? Well, he’s out o’ the way now.”

“Yes; but maybe they’ll arrest me an’ try me fer it, anyhow.”

“Bangs’ll git ye off if they do,” he said, with a low chuckle. “He’s promised to bring me off wid flyin’ colors.”

“But—but—he—he’s dead—Bangs is; they’ve lynched him, don’t ye know?”

“Niver heard a wurrud o’ it. Whan?”

“Four days ago.”

“An’ that’s the fuss they wuz makin’ down the strate whan I heerd ’em shoutin’ an’ yellin’, loike so manny divils! I axed the jailor what all the noise wuz about, but he answered me niver a wurrud—jist walked away wid his head up an’ his mouth toight shut. An’ here I’ve been a wonderin’ an’ scoldin’ bekase Bangs didn’t show hisself an’ lat me know how the bizniss was progressin’; how fast he wuz gittin’ ready to prove till the coort an’ jury that Phalim O’Rourke wuz as innercent o’ that attimpt on the ould man’s loife as an unborn babby.”

“But he’s dead, and who’ll clear ye now?” she asked, mournfully.

“I’ll have to break jail, an’ ye must help me, B’lindy.”

“If I only could,” she said, and her voice was weak and trembling; “but I’m half dead now; I can hardly stand fer weakness. I’ve been hidin’ in a damp, dark, dirty cave—the one you told me of—an’ I’m nearly starved; haven’t had enough to eat since—since that night on the raft. If ’twas light enough for you to see me, you’d never know me; I’m wasted to skin an’ bone, an’ my clo’es are all rags an’ dirt.”

“Did I iver hear the loike!” he exclaimed. “Well, niver moind, me jewel; whan I’m a free man agin I’ll soon have ye a wearin’ yer foine silks an’ satins an’ goold ornamints, an’ drivin’ in yer kerridge, mabbe, loike anny lady in the land.”

She sighed despairingly. “But you’ll never be able to break out o’ this; an’ there’s nobody now to defend ye on yer trial. They say ’twas some o’ your band that finished Himes; they say ’twas by your orderin’. Is that so?”

“Mabbe,” he chuckled; “the byes knowed me moind on that p’int; an’ they knowed the ould divil wad be the wan to swear away me liberty, if he’d a chance; but dead men tells no tales.”

“I wisht they’d let him live,” she sighed; “’twould have been better fer you.”

Then she went on to tell him what she had overheard the men at the river say about the probability of an attempt to lynch him.

While this talk was going on at the jail window, a wagon filled with masked and armed men was driving toward the town from the direction of Fairfield, another along the road leading from Frederic, a third coming from Riverside, while a fourth waited at the bridge over the river at Prairieville, where the other three presently joined it. Then falling into line, they drove up the street that led to the jail.

As they neared the building the creaking of their wheels struck upon Belinda’s ear.

“Oh, what’s that?” she cried, in startled tones, though half under her breath. “Wagons—one, two, three, four—and stoppin’ right out there, every one of ’em!”

“So they are, an’ all’s up wid me!” cried Phelim, hoarsely, adding a volley of oaths, as he grasped the bars and shook them fiercely in the frantic but vain effort to wrench them off.

The men were already alighting and pouring into the jail yard; then came a thundering knock upon the outer door, accompanied by a demand for instant admittance.

The trembling pair at the cell window were still listening, Phelim clinging to the bars, Belinda leaning heavily against the outer wall, while her heart beat almost to suffocation and her breath came gaspingly. They heard a second-story window raised and the jailor’s voice in parley with the would-be intruders.

“What is wanted, gentlemen?” he asked.

“Admittance; come down and open the door,” answered the spokesman of the party.

“We don’t admit visitors at this time o’ night,” said the jailor.

“Come down and open the door, or we’ll break it in,” was the response, in a tone of fierce determination.

“Who are you?” asked the jailor.

“Himes’s avengers. Give the murderer into our hands, and we ask nothing more.”

“Can’t do it, gentlemen. He’s been committed to my care by the officers of the law, and I’ve no right to give him up to any one else.”

“We don’t offer you any choice in the matter; you’ll open to us and give him up, or we’ll break in and take him in spite of you.”

Again the jailor refused to accede to their demand; then thundering blows of axes and hammers wielded by strong arms fell fast and thick on the door, the noise resounding through the building and striking terror to every hearer within its walls.

At length the door gave way, the assailants poured into the hall and seized the jailor, who had come down, lamp in hand, and would have tried to persuade them to resign their purpose; but they would not hear a word from him. As he refused to give up his keys, they bound him hand and foot and took forcible possession of them, then hastened to the cell wherein their intended victim was confined.

The noise of the struggle with the jailor, the tramp of heavy feet traversing the corridors, the fitting of the key in the lock of the cell door, all reached the ears of Phelim and Belinda, causing both their hearts to quake with terror. Belinda held her breath to listen, while trembling so that she could scarce keep from falling to the ground.

The heavy door of the cell swung back, and for a moment the little apartment was flooded with light from a lamp held high in the hand of one of the masked intruders.

He stood aside while four or five of his company filed rapidly in, and laid hold of the prisoner with no gentle hands.

Phelim saw at a glance that resistance was useless. With a face pale as death, eyes almost ready to start from their sockets, quivering lips, and in a tone that he vainly endeavored to make steady and defiant, “What are yees afther, sors?” he demanded. “Yees haven’t anny roight to be comin’ in here, fer I’m undher the pertection o’ the law.”

But even while he spoke they had pinioned his arms, and now surrounding him, they led him out through the corridors, the outer door, the jail-yard, and into the grove, where they halted with him under a large oak-tree.

A man was seated on its largest branch with a rope in his hand, one end of which he had already attached to the limb; at the other was a noose, which was quickly adjusted about Phelim’s neck; then he was forced to mount into a wagon that had been driven up under the tree.

He kicked, cursed, and swore fearful oaths, but found resistance vain; strong hands pulled, pushed, and lifted him into the vehicle and held him there.

“Now,” said a stern voice, “you have but five minutes to live; better stop cursing and spend your breath in prayer.”

“Yees are murtherin’ me; ye’re goin’ further nor the law o’ the State, black-hearted scoundrels that ye are!” he cried, fiercely.

“You are receiving the due reward of your deeds,” answered the voice. “The minutes are going; better spend your last breath in an effort to save your soul.”

The curses died on the lips of the ruffian; he looked up at the starlit sky, down and around on the crowd of dark figures and masked faces.

“Gintlemen, hain’t none o’ yees got no pity fer the ould mither and fayther that hasn’t niver a sowl to wurruk fer ’em an’ suppoort ’em in their fable ould age, barrin’ their only son as stands here wid a rope round his neck?” he asked.

“A son who has supported them by robbery and murder!” cried the same stern voice that had spoken before. “The time is up. Your blood be on your own head!” it added, and at a signal the wagon moved from under the culprit, and left him dangling high in air, the noose tightening about his neck.

The stern executioners stood watching him by the light of their lanterns till fully satisfied that life was extinct, then crowded into their wagons and drove away as they had come.

At the moment of their entrance into the cell Belinda staggered back into the shadow of a tree, at some little distance from the one they had selected as a gallows, from which, in an agony of woe, she witnessed the whole dreadful scene. She was in terror for herself, lest she might be made to share Phelim’s fate, yet that fear was almost swallowed up for the time in the anguish of grief for him that wrung her heart, as she looked upon the tragedy that ended the earthly life of the man she still loved, deeply dyed villain though she knew him to be.

She clung to the tree for support, while eye and ear were intent to catch every expression of his countenance and tone of his voice. But the flickering light of the lanterns gave her only fitful glimpses of his features, and the oaths and curses that fell from his lips were not such words as even she would desire to treasure up in her memory, for they inspired her with no hope that he was going to a better and happier world.

When she saw the wagon driven from under him, and knew that the deed was accomplished, she fell in a heap at the foot of the tree to which she had been clinging, and knew nothing more till roused to consciousness by the sound of the wheels of the departing vehicles.

Feebly she raised herself to a sitting posture, then glanced fearfully around till fully convinced that the self-constituted executioners were gone not to return; then, getting upon her feet like one who had scarce strength to move, she dragged herself to the other tree, where the body was hanging.

It was swaying slowly in the night wind.

“Phelim!” she cried, hoarsely—“Phelim, speak to me! Oh, it can’t be that ye’ll never speak again! Yes, he’s dead; they’d never leave him till they was sure o’ that! Oh, me heart’s broke! I ain’t got nothin’ to live fer no more! I might’s well a let ’em hang me, too!” and weeping, shuddering, tottering with weakness, she crept away to her hiding-place in the woods.

She had no bed but the ground, no covering save the starry canopy of heaven; she had no earthly friend, and had never cared to seek the friendship of that One “who sticketh closer than a brother.”

How utterly lonely and desolate she felt as she lay moaning and groaning upon her hard couch, weeping as if she would weep her very life away, longing to lay down the burdens and sorrows of life, yet shrinking in unspeakable terror from the thought of death.

Some words that she had heard, she knew not when or where, kept sounding in her ears, “The way of transgressors is hard.” “The wages of sin is death.” How the truth of those inspired declarations had been verified in Bangs’s case, in Phelim’s, and in her own!

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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