Scarcely a moment had elapsed ere he heard the sound of cautious footsteps. Peering again out of the foliage which concealed him so well, he saw Gerelda cautiously approach through the open door-way, and again he was compelled to be a listener to all that transpired.
Then, like a flash, came the terrible _denouement_, and Frazier, crouching behind the huge pillar, distinctly saw the butler enter and he witnessed the crime. He tried to prevent it by springing forward in time to save the hapless girl, but he seemed powerless to move either hand or foot. He could not have taken one step had his very life depended on it.
And when the terrible crime had been committed, and people flocked to the room, he dared not come forward, lest he should be accused of the horrible crime himself. In the great excitement he soon made his escape, though it was not until he found himself several blocks from the scene of the catastrophe that he dared stop to take breath.
The next day the captain made another visit to the little stone house, a.s.suring his friends that this would make no difference in their plans, that, as soon as the excitement subsided, he would carry out his original scheme.
A week pa.s.sed by, and during that time Captain Frazier, prowling incessantly about the neighborhood, watched carefully his opportunity to meet Jessie Bain.
The owner of a little sloop lying under cover down the bay was greatly annoyed at the loss of time; he was waiting too long, he told Frazier repeatedly, declaring at length that unless Frazier could manage to gain possession of the girl that very night that he would have to sail without her. This decision made Captain Frazier desperate, for he was now reduced to his last penny.
It was no easy matter to gain an entrance into the Varrick mansion a second time, and no one but the most desperate man in the world would have thought of attempting it; but, as on a former occasion, at last fate aided him.
The drawing-room being considered too warm, one of the servants threw open a large French window to cool off the apartment. This was Frazier"s chance. Like a shadow he stole into the room.
It was no easy matter to make out in which room he should find Jessie Bain. At length the sound of light, measured footsteps in a room he was just pa.s.sing fell upon his keen ear. He pushed the door cautiously open.
All was darkness within, save a narrow strip of light that came from the closely drawn _portieres_ of an inner apartment. Applying his eye to a small slit in the heavy velvet, he saw the object of his search. She was bending over a woman"s form lying on a couch, a form he knew to be Gerelda"s, while standing a little distance from them was a doctor mixing a potion. He heard him give Jessie Bain strict injunctions regarding the administration of it; then he saw the physician take his leave.
For a moment a death-like silence reigned in the room.
"Let me implore you," sobbed Jessie, "to save the man you love from the terrible fate that awaits him."
"I would not lift my finger or my voice to save him. If I must die, it is a satisfaction to me to know that he must die too!" whispered Gerelda.
"Cruel, cruel creature!" cried Jessie. "May Heaven find pardon for you, for I can not. I will ask no more for mercy at your hands. But hear me!
I will save Hubert Varrick if it lies within human power. I will find a way; he shall not die, I swear it!"
A gleam crept into Gerelda"s eyes.
"He is beyond your aid!" she cried, excitedly, half rising on her pillow. The effort this cost her proved almost too much for her. A dangerous whiteness overspread her face, and she fell back fainting, a small stream of blood trickling from her lips. Jessie sprang quickly to her feet, and administered a cordial from a small vial.
At that moment the doctor entered. He was alarmed at the expression on his patient"s face.
"There has been a sudden change for the worse," he declared. "Still, I knew it would come sooner or later. I said from the first, if she lived the week out I should be surprised. I see now that the end is very near.
When the sun rises on the morrow, her spirit will have reached its last resting-place, poor soul. You will need to exert extra care over her to-night, Miss Bain."
Soon after he took his departure, and once more Jessie was left alone with the girl whom Hubert Varrick had wedded, but did not love--the girl who had blasted all the happiness this world held for her. Yet she felt sorry from the depths of her soul that the girl"s life was ebbing away so fast.
Midnight struck, and the little hands of the cuckoo-clock on the mantel crept slowly round to one. Still there was no change, save that the white face on the pillow grew whiter, with a tinge of gray on it now.
The clock on the mantel seemed to tick louder and louder, and cry out hoa.r.s.ely:
"Time is fleeing fast! It will soon be too late for Gerelda to clear Hubert Varrick and save him from a felon"s death!"
Jessie Bain paced the floor up and down, in agony.
Suddenly a thought came to her--a thought so terrible that it nearly took her breath away.
"I will try it," whispered Jessie, hoa.r.s.ely.
She crept pantingly across the room to an escritoire which stood in the corner. Raising the lid, she drew from it a sheet of paper and a pen, and catching up a tiny ink-well, she hurried back to the bedside.
Bending with palpitating heart over the still form lying there, Jessie Bain muttered:
"No one will ever know," taking a quick glance about the room. "Gerelda and I are all alone together--all alone!"
Thrusting the pen in the limp fingers, Jessie Bain dipped it in the ink, and with her own hand guided the hand of Gerelda, making her write the following words on the white paper:
"VARRICK MANSION, _February 23d_, 1909.
"To those whom it may concern: I, Gerelda Varrick, lying on my death-bed, and realizing that the end may come at any moment, wish to clear from any suspicion, Hubert Varrick. I do solemnly swear it was not he who struck the fatal blow at me which ends my life.
It was some stranger, to me unknown.
"[Signed] GERELDA VARRICK.
"Witnessed by ----."
And here Jessie took the pen from the limp fingers affixing her own signature--"JESSIE BAIN."
The deed was done. Jessie drew a long, deep breath, ere she could reach forth to secure the all-important paper, a great faintness seized her, and throwing up her hands, she fell in a dead faint beside Gerelda"s bed.
Scarcely a moment had elapsed ere the _portieres_ that shut off an inner room were thrust quickly aside by a man"s hand.
CHAPTER x.x.xIII.
IN THE TOILS.
Captain Frazier had seen all that had transpired.
He was just about to spring into the apartment and tear the paper from Jessie Bain"s hands, when he saw her fall lifeless by the couch. Quickly he flung the _portieres_ aside and sprang into the apartment. It was but the work of a moment to secure the doc.u.ment, and to thrust it in his vest-pocket. Then, without an instant"s loss of time, he caught up the insensible form of Jessie, throwing a dark, heavy shawl about her, he shot hurriedly out of the room and down the corridor, making for the drawing-room, whose long French windows opened on the porch. He had scarcely crossed the threshold ere he heard the sound of hurrying footsteps.
"Ha! they heard the sound of her fall," he muttered, dashing open the window and springing through it with his burden, landing knee-deep in the white, soft snow-drift.
It took but a moment more to gain the road, and then he well knew the dark, waving pines would screen him from the sight of any one who might attempt to pursue him. As he stopped to take breath for a moment, he glanced back at the mansion, and saw lights moving to and fro in the upper windows.
Dashing breathlessly onward, he threaded his way up one deserted street and down another, dodging into hall-ways if he saw a lone pedestrian quite a distance off, approaching, remaining there until their footsteps had pa.s.sed and died away. To add to his annoyance Jessie began to show signs of returning consciousness.
"This will never do at this crisis of affairs," he cried to himself.
He had come well equipped for the emergency, and drawing a small vial from an inner pocket, he dashed half of its contents over the shawl which enveloped the girl"s head. Its pungent odors soon quieted Jessie"s struggles.
Hailing a pa.s.sing coupe, he soon deposited his burden therein, jumping in himself after giving instructions to the driver to make all possible haste. They were jostled along the road with lightning-like rapidity, and half an hour afterward had made the distance, and the cab drew up in the loneliest part of the wharf.
"Here we are, sir," the driver said, springing down from his box and opening the door.
The gentleman within did not respond.
"What is the matter with the man?" he muttered, striking a match and thrusting it into the strange customer"s face. He drew back with a great cry. The man"s face was as white as death, and at that instant he became aware of the strong odor of chloroform, which filled the vehicle to suffocation.