"Let me up! Let me up!" he cried in a low, hurried voice. "I"ll give you a hundred dollars in gold to let me go. The man a"n"t hurt--don"t you see him stirring? He"ll come to himself in two minutes. Let me up! I"ll give you a hundred and fifty dollars in gold, now, here on the spot, and the watch out of my pocket; take it yourself, with your own hands!"
"Ketch me lett"n go!" was Abel"s emphatic answer.
Mr. Bernard was now getting first his senses, and then some few of his scattered wits together.
"Who"s hurt? What"s happened?" he asked, staring about him.
Then he felt something about his neck; and putting his hands up, found the loop of the la.s.so. Abel quickly slipped the noose over Mr. Bernard"s head, and put it round the neck of the miserable d.i.c.k Venner, who, with his disabled arm, felt resistance was hopeless.
The party now took up the line of march for old Dr. Kettredge"s house, Abel carrying Langdon"s pistol, and leading d.i.c.k Venner, Bernard Langdon holding the hayfork. He was still half-stunned, and felt it was all a dream, when they reached the house.
"My mind is confused," he told the doctor. "I"ve had a fall."
"Sit down, sit down," the doctor said. "Abel will tell me about it.
Slight concussion of the brain. Can"t remember very well for an hour or two--will come right by to-morrow!"
d.i.c.k Venner"s shoulder was out of joint, the doctor found; he replaced it in a very few minutes. That night the doctor drove d.i.c.k forty miles at a stretch, out of the limits of the state.
He had implored them to let him go, and Mr. Bernard was quite willing that no further proceedings should be taken.
_IV.--The Secret is Whispered_
A week after d.i.c.k Venner"s departure Elsie went off at the accustomed hour to the school. She had none of the hard, wicked light in her eyes that morning, and looked gentle, but dreamy.
At the end of the school hours, when the girls had all gone out, Elsie came up to Mr. Bernard, and said, in a very low voice, "Will you walk towards my home with me to-day?"
So they walked along together on their way towards the Dudley mansion.
"I have no friend," Elsie said all at once. "n.o.body loves me but one old woman--old Sophy!"
"I am your friend, Elsie. Tell me what I can do to render your life happier."
_"Love me!"_ said Elsie Venner.
Mr. Bernard turned pale.
"Elsie," he said presently, "I do love you, as a sister with sorrows of her own--as one whom I would save at the risk of my happiness and life.
Give me your hand, dear Elsie, and trust me that I will be as true a friend to you as if we were children of the same mother!"
Elsie gave him her hand mechanically, and he pressed it gently. They walked almost in silence the rest of the way.
It was all over with poor Elsie. She went at once to her own room when they reached the mansion-house, and never left it.
They sent for the old doctor, and he ordered some remedies, saying he would call the next day, hoping to find her better. But the next day came, and the next, and still Elsie was on her bed--feverish, restless, and silent.
"Send me Helen Darley," she said at last, on the fourth day.
And Helen came. Dudley Venner followed her into the room.
"She is your patient," he said, "except while the doctor is here."
Helen Darley often tried in those days and nights, when she sat by Elsie"s bed, to enter into the sick girl"s confidence and affections, but there was always something that seemed inexplicable in the changes of mood. So Helen determined to ask old Sophy some questions.
"How old is Elsie?"
"Eighteen years this las" September."
"How long ago did her mother die?"
"Eighteen year ago this October."
Helen was silent for a moment. Then she whispered,
"What did her mother die of, Sophy?"
The old woman caught Helen by the hand and clung to it, as if in fear.
"Don"t never speak in this house "bout what Elsie"s mother died of!" she said. "G.o.d has made Ugly Things wi" death in their mouths, Miss Darlin", an" He knows what they"re for. But my poor Elsie! To have her blood changed in her before--It was in July mistress got her death, but she liv" till three week after my poor Elsie was born."
She could speak no more; she had said enough. Helen remembered the stories she had heard on coming to the village. Now she knew the secret of the fascination which looked out of the cold, glittering eyes.
A great change came over Elsie in the last few days. It seemed to her father as if the malign influence which had pervaded her being had been driven forth or exorcised.
"It"s her mother"s look!" said old Sophy. "It"s her mother"s own face right over again. She never look" so before--the Lord"s hand is on her!
His will be done!"
But Elsie"s heart was beating more feebly every day. One night, with sudden effort, she threw her arms round her father"s neck, kissed him, and said, "Good-night, my dear father!"
Then her head fell back upon her pillow, and a long sigh breathed through her lips.
Elsie Venner was dead!
In the following summer Mr. Dudley Venner married Miss Helen Darley. Mr.
Bernard Langdon returned to college, resumed his medical studies, took his degree as Doctor of Medicine, and he now also is married.
THOMAS HUGHES
Tom Brown"s Schooldays