"Do they, then, eat and drink the best?"
"The very best; oh, they are rich."
"What do they want here?"
"They have come to destroy the brigands; is it not droll?"
"Ha! have they succeeded?"
"No; but if they are not careful, the brigands will destroy them. They are so careless."
Diana was afraid to exhibit too much interest in the doings of the Harkaways, lest she should arouse suspicion.
So she simply nodded, and listened most anxiously to what the garrulous old woman would say next.
"So very careless; anyone might get into their house by the side door,"
said the ancient dame.
"Well, it is their own fault if they are robbed."
"True. But it would be little credit to the robber; they think the brigands are afraid to enter the town, so they don"t take many precautions."
Diana treasured up every word of this.
Presently the old woman, finding her guest was not conversationally inclined, went out again, and Diana was left alone.
The sun set, and darkness began to gather rapidly when she went out, and after going a little way down the street, returned, and sought the side door of Harkaway"s house.
She turned the handle softly and entered.
There was no one in the kitchen where she found herself, but the subdued noise of knives and forks in another apartment convinced her that they were at dinner or some other meal.
Diana, as soon as she had ascertained that fact, glided like a spectre up the stairs, and noiselessly examined various bedchambers.
At length she decided on hiding herself in one which seemed better furnished than the others.
"This must be it," she thought.
And she was right.
It was the apartment of Mrs. Harkaway.
On the dressing-table was a folded paper.
Diana opened it, and found that it was a milliner"s bill against Mrs.
Harkaway.
"For making a pearl-grey silk dress, etc., etc."
To hide herself was Diana"s next move.
Clutching her sharp dagger firmly in her hand, the vengeful woman concealed herself behind some tapestry and waited.
Nor had she long to wait.
A light foot was heard without.
The door was opened, and a second afterwards, a graceful female form was seated before the mirror, with its back towards Diana.
And a female voice said--
"This pearl-grey silk suits my complexion far better than I thought it would. But it fits me badly. These Greek milliners are not to be compared with those of London or Paris."
Then the wearer of the pearl-grey silk heaved a deep sigh, and Diana softly moved the curtain aside a little to get a view of the person who had spoken.
The face was not visible, but from the figure generally, Diana had not the slightest doubt it was Mrs. Harkaway.
"I want some new jewellery sadly," continued "pearl-grey silk;" "but yet, after all, it would be scarcely safe to wear it here, while the brigands are in the neighbourhood. But they will soon be done for."
The widow glided out from her hiding-place as the wearer of the silk dress continued--
"We have one villain safe enough, and another, Mathias, was smothered in a chimney--ha, ha, ha, ha--oh!"
The laugh ended in a deep groan, and never more came the slightest sound from those lips that a moment before had been so merry.
Diana had struck so hard and surely that no second blow was needed, for the first pierced a human heart.
"That laugh was an insult to the memory of my dead husband," she said.
"Let none dare scoff at Mathias."
Like a shadow, she glided away, leaving the wearer of the pearl-grey silk sitting motionless before the mirror. Dead!
The silk dress soaked with her heart"s blood.
A few minutes later, some one entered Mrs. Harkaway"s apartment, and then arose the fearful cry--
"Help! murder!"
CHAPTER XXIII.
YOUNG JACK IN TROUBLE--THE COUNCIL--DOOM OF THE BOYS--A SOLDIER"S GRAVE AT DAYBREAK.
Young Jack and Harry Girdwood, who by their friends are supposed to have been grievously ill-treated, found themselves dragged by rough and brutal hands to a considerable distance from the sh.o.r.e where they had unfortunately landed.