Soon--aye, but that soon was all too late.
Too late!
The thought wrung her heart, and she bent her head and wept.
"This is very painful," said young Jack.
"It is, Jack," said his comrade, in a broken voice. "I don"t like to see a boy crying."
They were still ignorant of their friend"s real s.e.x.
"What is that?"
"What?"
"Don"t you hear?"
"I do; it sounds like some heavy instrument beating the earth close at hand."
"Yes, like digging."
The three started at the word.
No sooner was it uttered than the meaning of it struck them all three, and sent a chill to their very hearts.
Digging at that fatal hour, so short a time before daybreak, could have but one significance.
Grave-making; and if the two hapless boys quailed at that awful sound, can we accuse them of cowardice?
No.
a.s.suredly not.
Who amongst the bravest could listen to such a sound unmoved?
To have been callous to such a thing would have shown them mere senseless logs, nothing more.
"You know what that is?" she said, in a faint voice.
"We do," responded Harry Girdwood.
"And you?"
This was to young Jack.
"Yes."
The reply of both was given in a grave voice, befitting such a solemn occasion.
Yet their voices never trembled, never faltered.
She understood them well, and her expression showed clearly as words the admiration she felt for their courage.
"I am glad that you know the worst," she said, in a low but impressive tone, "for the unpleasant task of telling you is not left for me. Have you any thing to say before--"
"No."
"All that I would say," remarked young Jack, "that since they mean a.s.sa.s.sinating us, I hope that they will do their work cleanly, and not put us to the torture."
"At the worst," added his companion, "we shall not give them the satisfaction of seeing us beg and pray for mercy."
"It would be useless."
"We know it."
"And so shall not give them the chance of saying that two Englishmen showed the white feather."
"Bravely spoken," said the girl, "but the night is growing old, and so listen to what I have to say."
And then she made a communication which considerably startled them.
At first they listened as though in a dream, for they could not believe in the reality of what she said, but they were not sorry to believe in its truth.
The nature of this communication will appear later on.
"And now," she said solemnly, "the time is short. I must insist upon your sleeping. Rest, and I will watch by your side. A friendly voice at least shall call you for the last dreadful trial of all."
CHAPTER XXV.
THE TRIPLE EXECUTION--A SOLDIER"S GRAVE--TORO"S LUCK.
Morning dawned.
The eastern sky was only just tinged with the light of the rising sun when the bugle call summoned the firing party.
The party in question was composed of six men commanded by Hunston.
He had insisted upon having this post, one that none of the brigands envied him--so that he might gloat over his victims at the last hour.
The two boys were aroused with some difficulty, for strange though it may appear, they were sleeping soundly when the fatal moment approached.
"Come," said the girl, in a hollow voice. "Lirico is already on the ground."