"Take off all your shoes and walk lightly in your stocking feet--do not speak--do not breathe--follow me as silent as death," said Herbert Greyson, as he softly unlocked the front door and entered the house.
Silently and stealthily they pa.s.sed through the middle hall, up the broad staircase, and through the long, narrow pa.s.sages and steep stairs that led to Capitola"s remote chamber.
There at the door they paused awhile to listen.
All was still within.
Herbert Greyson unlocked the door, withdrew the key, and opened it and entered the room, followed by all the men. He had scarcely time to close the door and lock it on the inside, and withdraw the key, before the robbers, finding themselves surprised, burst out from their hiding place and made a rush for the pa.s.sage; but their means of escape had been already cut off by the forethought of Herbert Greyson.
A sharp conflict ensued.
Upon first being summoned to surrender the robbers responded by a hail-storm of bullets from their revolvers, followed instantly by a charge of bowie knives. This was met by an avalanche of blows from pick-axes, pokers, pitchforks, sledge-hammers, spades and rakes, beneath which the miscreants were quickly beaten down and overwhelmed.
They were then set upon and bound with strong ropes brought for the purpose by Mr. Ezy.
When they were thus secured, hand and foot, Capitola, who had been a spectator of the whole scene, and exposed as much as any other to the rattle of the bullets, now approached and looked at the vanquished.
Black Donald certainly was not one of the party, who were no other than our old acquaintances--Hal, Steve and d.i.c.k--of the band!
Each burglar was conveyed to a separate apartment and a strong guard set over him.
Then Herbert Greyson, who had received a flesh wound in his left arm, returned to the scene of the conflict to look after the wounded. Several of the negroes had received gun-shot wounds of more or less importance.
These were speedily attended to. Mrs. Condiment, who had slept securely through all the fight, was now awakened by Capitola, and cautiously informed of what had taken place and a.s.sured that all danger was now over.
The worthy woman, as soon as she recovered from the consternation into which the news had plunged her, at once set about succoring the wounded.
Cots and mattresses were made up in one of the empty rooms and bandages and balsams prepared.
And not until all who had been hurt were made comfortable, did Herbert Greyson throw himself upon horseback, and ride off to the county seat to summon the authorities, and to inform Major Warfield of what had happened.
No one thought of retiring to bed at Hurricane Hall that night.
Mrs. Condiment, Capitola and Patty sat watching by the bedsides of the wounded.
Bill Ezy and the men who had escaped injury mounted guard over the prisoners.
Thus they all remained until sunrise, when the Major, attended by the Deputy Sheriff and half a dozen constables, arrived. The night ride of several miles had not sufficed to modify the fury into which Old Hurricane had been thrown by the news Herbert Greyson had aroused him from sleep to communicate. He reached Hurricane Hall in a state of excitement that his factotum Wool characterized as "boiling." But "in the very torrent, tempest and whirlwind of his pa.s.sion" he remembered that to rail at the vanquished, wounded and bound was unmanly, and so he did not trust himself to see or speak to the prisoners.
They were placed in a wagon and under a strong escort of constables were conveyed by the Deputy Sheriff to the county seat, where they were securely lodged in jail.
But Old Hurricane"s emotions of one sort or another were a treat to see!
He bemoaned the sufferings of his poor wounded men; he raved at the danger to which his "women-kind" had been exposed, and he exulted in the heroism of Capitola, catching her up in his arms and crying out:
"Oh, my dear Cap! My heroine! My queen! And it was you against whom I was plotting treason--ninny that I was! You that have saved my house from pillage and my people from slaughter! Oh, Cap, what a jewel you are--my dear!"
To all of which Capitola, extricating her curly head from his embrace, cried only:
"Bother!"
Utterly refusing to be made a lioness of, and firmly rejecting the grand triumph.
The next day Major Warfield went up to the county seat to attend the examination of the three burglars, whom he had the satisfaction of seeing fully committed to prison to await their trial at the next term of the Criminal Court, which would not sit until October; consequently the prisoners had the prospect of remaining in jail some months, which Old Hurricane declared to be "some satisfaction."
CHAPTER XXVII.
SEEKING HIS FORTUNE.
A wide future smiles before him, His heart will beat for fame, And he will learn to breathe with love The music of a name, Writ on the tablets of his heart In characters of flame.
--Sargent.
When the winter"s course of medical lectures at the Washington College was over, late in the spring, Traverse Rocke returned to Willow Heights.
The good doctor gave him a glad welcome, congratulating him upon his improved appearance and manly bearing.
Clara received him with blushing pleasure, and Marah Rocke with all the mother"s love for her only child.
He quickly fell into the old pleasant routine of his country life, resumed his arduous studies in the doctor"s office, his work in the flower garden, and his morning rides and evening talk with the doctor"s lovely child.
Not the least obstacle was set in the way of his a.s.sociation with Clara, yet Traverse, grown stronger and wiser than his years would seem to promise, controlled both his feelings and his actions, and never departed from the most respectful reserve, or suffered himself to be drawn into that dangerous familiarity to which their constant companionship might tempt him.
Marah Rocke, with maternal pride, witnessed his constant self-control and encouraged him to persevere. Often in the enthusiasm of her heart, when they were alone, she would throw her arm around him, and push the dark, cl.u.s.tering curls from his fine forehead, and, gazing fondly on his face, exclaim:
"That is my n.o.ble-hearted boy! Oh, Traverse, G.o.d will bless you! He only tries you now to strengthen you!"
Traverse always understood these vague words and would return her embrace with all his boyish ardor and say:
"G.o.d does bless me now, mother! He blesses me so much, in so many, many ways, that I should be worse than a heathen not to be willing to bear cheerfully one trial?"
And so Traverse would "reck his own rede" and cultivate cheerful grat.i.tude as a duty to G.o.d and man.
Clara, also, now, with her feminine intuition, comprehended her reserved lover, honored his motives and rested satisfied with being so deeply loved, trusting all their unknown future to heaven.
The doctor"s appreciation and esteem for Traverse increased with every new unfolding of the youth"s heart and intellect, and never did master take more pains with a favorite pupil, or father with a beloved son, than did the doctor to push Traverse on in his profession. The improvement of the youth was truly surprising.
Thus pa.s.sed the summer in healthful alternation of study and exercise.
When the season waned, late in the autumn, he went a second time to Washington to attend the winter"s course of lectures at the Medical College.
The doctor gave him letters recommending him as a young man of extraordinary talents and of excellent moral character, to the particular attention of several of the most eminent professors.
His mother bore this second parting with more cheerfulness, especially as the separation was enlivened by frequent letters from Traverse, full of the history of the present and the hopes of the future.
The doctor did not forget from time to time to jog the memories of his friends, the professors of the medical college, that they might afford his protege every facility and a.s.sistance in the prosecution of his studies.
Toward spring Traverse wrote to his friends that his hopes were sanguine of obtaining his diploma at the examination to be held at the end of the session. And when Traverse expressed this hope, they who knew him so well felt a.s.sured that he had made no vain boast.