Hatchie had been able, by severe exertion, to keep within hearing of the splashing oars. The current fortunately carried him near the wood-yard, and, aided by the sounds he heard at the cabin, and by the boat which he saw, he concluded the party had landed there. Letting go the door, a few vigorous strokes brought him to the sh.o.r.e. Approaching the cabin, he satisfied himself that his mistress had taken shelter there. Concealing himself in the woods, he awaited with much anxiety the next movement of the attorney. In the morning he heard the noise at the cabin, and had been the means of saving his mistress from a calamity far more dreadful than death itself.
On the evening of the day of the explosion, an elderly gentleman sat in a private apartment of one of the princ.i.p.al hotels in Vicksburg, attentively reading an "Extra," in which the particulars of the disaster were detailed. He read, with little apparent interest, the account, until he came to the names of "Saved, Killed, Wounded and Missing." An expression of the deepest anxiety settled upon his countenance. He finished reading the list of survivors, and a transient feeling of satisfaction was visible on his face. When in the list of the "missing"
he read the name of "Miss Dumont, Antoine De Guy and Henry Carroll," a smile as of glutted revenge and malignant hatred dispelled the cloud of anxiety which had before brooded over his features. Throwing down the sheet, he drank off a gla.s.s of brandy, which had been waiting his pleasure on the table. The potion was not insignificant in quant.i.ty or strength, and the wry face he made did not add to the amiability of his expression. As the dose permeated his brain, and produced that agreeable lightness which is the first phase of intoxication, he rubbed his hands with childish delight, and half muttered an expression of pleasure.
Suddenly his countenance a.s.sumed its former lowering aspect, his brows knit, and his lips compressed.
"Missing!" muttered he. "What the devil does _missing_ mean? What can it mean but dead, defunct, gone to a better world, as the canting hypocrites say?"
But we will not attempt to record the muttered soliloquy of the gentleman,--Jaspar Dumont, who had reached Vicksburg that day, from the wood-yard where we left him. It was too profane, too sacrilegious, to stain our page.
Grasping the bell-rope with a sudden energy, as though a new thought had struck him, he gave it a violent pull, which brought to his presence a black waiter.
"Has the Dragon returned?" asked Jaspar.
"Yes, sar, jus got in, Ma.s.sa."
"Is there any person in the house who went up in her?"
"Yes, ma.s.sa, one gemman in de office."
"Who is he?"
"Ma.s.sa--ma.s.sa--" and the darkey scratched his head, to stimulate his memory, which act instantly brought the name to his mind.
"Ma.s.sa _Lousey_."
"Mister what, you black scoundrel!"
"Yes, sar,--Ma.s.sa Lousey; dat"s de name."
"Lousey?" repeated Jaspar.
"Stop bit," said the waiter, a new idea penetrating his cranium. "Dar Lousey, dat"s de name, for sartin."
"Dalhousie," responded Jaspar. "Give my compliments to Mr. Dalhousie, and ask him to oblige me with a few moments" conversation in this room."
"Yes, sar;" and the waiter retired, muttering, "Dar Lousey."
The Dragon was a small steamer, which had been sent, on the intelligence of a "blow up," to obtain the particulars for the press, and render a.s.sistance to the survivors. Dalhousie was a transient visitor at the hotel, and, with many others, had gone in the Dragon to gratify his curiosity.
"Sorry to trouble you, sir," said Jaspar, as the gentleman entered the apartment; "but I am much interested in the fate of several persons who were pa.s.sengers on board the Chalmetta."
"No trouble, Mr. Dumont, I am extremely happy to serve you," replied Dalhousie, whose obsequious manners were ample evidence of his sincerity.
"My niece was on board of her," continued Jaspar, "and I see her name in the list of missing."
"Your _niece_!" replied Dalhousie, emphasizing the latter word. He had a few days before come from New Orleans, and had there heard of the startling developments in the Dumont family.
"No matter," returned Jaspar, sharply; "she went by the name of Dumont.
Did you find any bodies?"
"We picked up the remains of six men and two females."
"Can you describe the females? How were they dressed?" asked Jaspar, in an excited manner.
"One was dressed in black. The other had on a common calico."
"But the one in black,--describe her,--her hair,--was she tall or short?" interrupted Jaspar, hurriedly.
"Her hair was in curls. She was apparently about twenty-six or seven, and rather short in stature."
"Curls," muttered Jaspar; "she has not worn curls since the colonel died. She may have put them on again to please that infernal Captain Carroll. Twenty-six years old, you think?"
"She may have been younger. Her features were terribly mangled," and Mr.
Dalhousie cast a penetrating glance at Jaspar, as though he would read out the beatings of his black heart.
Jaspar considered again the description, and, though it did not correspond to his niece"s, his anxiety had contributed to warp his judgment. He was very willing to believe the Chalmetta"s fatal disaster had forever removed the only obstacle to the gratification of his ambition, and the only source of future insecurity. He paced the room, muttering, in his abstraction, sundry broken phrases.
Dalhousie watched him, and endeavored to obtain the purport of his disjointed soliloquy. A stranger, without some strong motive, could scarcely have had so much interest in him as he appeared to have.
"Had she any jewels--ornaments of any kind?" asked Dalhousie, after the silence had grown disagreeable to him.
"She had," replied Jaspar, stopping suddenly in his perambulation of the room, and speaking with an eagerness which betrayed his anxiety to obtain more evidence. "Were any found upon her person?"
"You are a man of honor, Mr. Dumont, and, if I disclose to you a thoughtless indiscretion of my own, you will not, of course, expose me?" said Dalhousie, with, hesitation, and apparent want of confidence.
"Of course not," replied Jaspar, impatiently. "What has this to do with the matter?"
"Did your niece wear a ring?"
"Yes, a mourning ring."
"Do you know the ring? Could you identify it?"
"Certainly," replied Jaspar, who remembered having seen an ornament of this description on the finger of Emily.
"Will you describe it to me, if you please?"
But Jaspar had reckoned without his host. The details of a piece of jewelry were matters entirely foreign to his taste. However, he succeeded in giving a description, which, from its general terms, might have applied to one mourning ring as well as another.
"Is this the one?" asked Dalhousie, with an anxiety which he could scarcely conceal, as he produced a ring.
"That _is_ it," replied Jaspar, confidently; and the jewel did bear some resemblance to that worn by Emily.
"But where did you obtain this?"
"I must insist on the most inviolable secrecy."
"Certainly, certainly," said Jaspar, eagerly.