简介
首页

The American Prisoner

CHAPTER XI FREE
关灯
护眼
字体:
上一章    回目录 下一章

while john lee carried his experience of the night to grace at the first opportunity, malherb told no man of the nocturnal meeting with lovey. he turned his secret over, and between intervals of hunting and of work, held deep speculation with himself how best to circumvent the miser. vaguely he dreamed of cunning traps and surprises, but such warfare was foreign to maurice malherb, and his mind lent itself to no subtlety in that sort. nor would he ask assistance of any man; for, though he thought upon peter norcot more than once, and might, indeed, have made no better choice, yet pride rebelled before the spectacle of himself seeking aid to outwit a woman. that he would recover lovey's stolen treasure the master felt positive; but no means of doing so immediately appeared.

john lee, meanwhile, had less than malherb's knowledge in one direction, much more in another. that the amphora was actually in his grandmother's possession he did not guess; but the locality of her hidden haunt he had discovered. all that he knew grace now learnt, and her mind awoke into great enthusiasm.

"'and then she vanished'! no, no, dear john; people don't vanish—not even mysterious, savage old misers like lovey. she went somewhere out of your sight and out of your reach for the present; but flesh and blood cannot vanish," said grace very seriously.

"there were witches in the bible, and there may be on dartmoor," he answered. "not that i'm afeared any more. i'm going to hunt hangman's hollow every moment of my spare time henceforth. all the future depends on it for me, and for you, and for mr. malherb also, since you say that without money things must fall out hardly in a year or so."

yet, despite john lee's great resolutions, a chance unforeseen came now to thwart them, and it was many weeks before any human foot explored the desolate ravine that hid lovey lee's secrets. as though to convince the master of fox tor farm that the moor-men did well to fear winter, terrific weather fell upon the upland waste. long weeks of sulky black frost ended in white frost. from lowering skies the sun crept forth above the undulation of cater's beam; but his direct rays proved powerless to thaw the ground. each night the frost bit deeper; each morning the cattle byres were coated with ice from the frozen breath of the kine. work was suspended, and the world seemed a thing perished and insensible to any further touch of life. then, alter a cloudless week, the wind, that had puffed fitfully as it listed, yet never found a cloud to drive along the pale azure floors of heaven, went north and stopped there. now the frost abated by a degree or two, but still remained severe and, from day to day, feathers and films of cloud swept southerly. for some time these vanished before nightfall; then they increased and a few light snow-showers fell. they heralded a notable and terrific blizzard, whose sustained fury burst upon the moor, swallowed its boundaries, buried its lonely heart and piled mighty barriers of snow between the central waste and all civilisation. fox tor farm was well equipped for such a siege; but many an isolated homestead, now surprised by weather beyond man's memory to parallel, found itself much straitened until the thaw.

at one place above all others this avalanche of snow brought with it deep concern and anxiety. in the war prison, commandant cottrell and his staff, with ten thousand men to feed, found great problems threatening their peace. supplies promised quickly to run short, and even the store of sealed provisions set aside for any possible emergency, represented little more than a week's fare for the hosts of americans and french. within three days of the great isolation food was being nursed and rations were decreased—a hardship terrible at such a time. but unutterable suffering and woe beyond words marked these black weeks at prince town. infinite cold settled upon the waste, and thousands of prisoners stuck all day to their hammocks, leaving them only at the hour of meals. all buying and selling had been suspended, for the country-folk now possessed nothing they could part from. within the war prison order and discipline were scarce maintained beneath the strain; death reigned at the hospital, and nimiety of human misery found an end in the frozen earth.

the tempest that followed upon this arctic weather deeply affected the fortunes of the seven. after some weeks of imprisonment in the cachots, cecil stark and his companions rejoined their compatriots in prison no. 4. what had happened to defeat their scheme they knew not, and no thought of treachery amongst their comrades darkened a single heart, because every man supposed that lovey lee had betrayed them. for a time after their failure each held aloof from the rest, since suspicious eyes now closely marked their actions. then came a meeting with captain cottrell, and immediately after their liberation, the three officers, miller, stark and burnham, were summoned before the commandant.

they appeared and for the first time learnt that peter norcot had availed with the authorities.

"but those who break prison would break parole," said cottrell drily. "therefore upon my report, gentlemen, and as the result of your own folly, the privileges that a generous government was prepared to extend to you are now denied."

commodore miller answered for the americans.

"little need be said to what you tell us, captain cottrell. we stand under a deep debt of gratitude to mr. norcot, for his generous and disinterested effort on our behalf; and our failure to make good escape will not unnaturally be punished by a withdrawal of the privilege of parole. one other point only of your remarks challenges my comment, and that i would willingly avoid, since it is no wish of ours to quarrel personally with any man in authority. but when you say that those who would break prison would break parole, i declare that you speak for yourself, and not for these gentlemen, or for me. we are honourable men and the prisoners of an honourable country, but you—by these words you have proclaimed yourself a mean and base soul, not worthy either to have the control of gentlemen, or to mingle with them."

the commodore spoke with calm self-restraint, and upon the silence that followed his rebuke struck stark with somewhat less careful choice of words.

"every man has a right to regain his liberty at any cost; but no man has a right to tell a lie and break a solemn oath. you are much to be pitied, commandant, in that you, who call yourself an officer and a gentleman, can confuse such widely different issues."

the soldier gnawed his moustache and grew red.

"i stand corrected," he said. "so many of your countrymen have committed this crime of breaking their parole, that i assumed the issues were not regarded as opposite in the american mind. commodore miller, i pray that you will accept my apologies, and i shall be very happy after the war is ended, to give you every satisfaction."

"it is enough," said miller. "i would that you could extend your ready sense of justice to the parole now tended to us by authority; but that, of course, is a question for your personal judgment."

"in that connection no apology is needed nor will be offered," returned the other. "had you escaped, the onus of the achievement must have fallen upon my shoulders. i had possibly been cashiered."

"since we are on it, captain cottrell," said stark, "may i, as a sportsman and in good faith, inquire how you discovered our enterprise and knew so punctually both when and where we should endeavour to depart?"

"what! the informer's name? surely you know that informers are sacred in this world, whatever may be their fate in the next?"

"this much at least i beg you to tell us, if you hold it square with duty. was it from within or from without that we were struck? we may desire to try again, and it is well to know friend from foe."

captain cottrell laughed at the bold question. he reflected a moment, then made reply.

"you've preached me a sermon on honour, and i'll pay for it with a word of advice. a man's worst foes shall be they of his own household. there's a seed to sow in your heart, mr. stark! but since you will have it, then take it. at least i trust that it may serve to break up a little family party of seven which i hear about. it will be better for all concerned that you respect the prison regulations henceforth. now, gentlemen, i wish you a very good day."

in darkness and indignation they departed before this cynical speech. stark and burnham were for disbelieving it utterly; commodore miller, more cautious and more experienced, deemed the assertion not one to ignore without serious reflections.

"'tis a patent lie," declared stark. "i marvel that you cannot see it, sir. he actually dared to declare his object in uttering it. he wishes to separate the seven and scatter them finally. what more certain way of so doing than by making each distrust the rest?"

"we shall only doubt each other, however, if we believe him," said william burnham.

"yet i will not say offhand that he lied," answered the commodore.

thus the cloud worked to bitterness from the outset. four of the seven, their hearts fouled by racial prejudice, swore that cuffee was the culprit; while the commodore supported poor sam, and stark staked his own honesty and honour upon the negro's. acrimonious conversations passed among them, and it seemed that commandant cottrell had fully effected his purpose; but then came the awful weather, and certain necessary relaxations called for by its severity, now drew the old friends together again in hope of escape.

the cold had long reduced all exercise in the open, and through the greater part of every day the prisoners collected by thousands in the chambers immediately beneath the roof of each main building. here, through the windows, a wide survey of the surrounding country offered, and stark and his friends often noted the visible contours of the land, and realised to some extent the accuracy of lovey lee's maps. they learned also of a matter more interesting and nearer at hand. the boxes upon the inner wall were empty, for one soldier had already perished of frost-bite on sentry-go, and two others were at the door of death. to stand in the open air for half an hour was a proceeding so dangerous that the inner wall now remained unguarded save by its automatic protection of bells and wires.

upon the occasion of the blizzard, while yet nature waited in frozen silence and the north grew black at midday, six of the seven, taking their lives in their hands, made a second effort to escape. david leverett alone had no share in the enterprise, for he was sick of a chill and kept his bed in the hospital. burnham and stark demurred whether they might in honour repeat their attempt without him, but commodore miller decided that the greatest good to the greatest number must determine their action. they were all sailors, and failing the apparatus of a wire ladder, employed in their first experiment, they designed a living ladder that could be quickly built up of their own persons. the manoeuvre was not difficult, and they practised it out of sight of the sentries until each man well knew his place and part in it.

at the fall of evening, while yet faint grey light marked the western sky and the snow had only just begun to fall, many men went into the yards for water. this, in the shape of ice, they conveyed to the prisons, and each party in turn broke a portion from their frozen conduits and fled back shivering into the fetid warmth of the great buildings. the guards and the guarded alike shrank from the open air, and in that hour before the storm, a hundred men might have climbed out of the prison with no eye to mark their going. but the weather made escape suicide; the north wind and the snow were the gaolers of dartmoor for many a day henceforth.

separating themselves from the throng, commodore miller and his companions departed one by one and presently assembled behind the angle of an empty cachot. from here they approached the inner wall, and, while the blood was still warm in them, set about their task. the square and solid shape of james knapps came first, sam cuffee leapt to his shoulders, stark followed, and then came burnham, while the commodore next worked his way up the living ladder; and the light and weakly person of caleb carberry brought up the rear. once the warning bells jangled, but the wind swept the sound away, and no turnkey heard them. the darkness began to close in quickly, while far above ruddy splashes of light blazed like fierce eyes from the squat windows of the prison.

the difficulty of the ascension was quickly tackled and mastered. with knapps centred the chief strain, but despite his weight the man proved nimble enough, and though he bruised both cuffee and stark not a little as he clambered over them, soon jimmy reached the top. then the negro, full of muffled regrets at his clumsy feet and hands, also went aloft, and within three minutes of the start the whole six had safely passed the inner wall. descent from this was easy, for steps rose upon the outer side of it and communicated with the sentry-boxes along the top. now snow fell upon them in great solitary flakes, and they got a glimpse of inky cloud-banks swallowing the moor to windward; then they hurried down into the great fosse beneath them, crossed it and prepared to scale the outer wall.

up they went, though more slowly than before, for the cold began to touch them. soon they crowded in a row aloft like forlorn birds; then they felt the full force of the wind, and stood aghast at the grim desolation spread beneath.

"get to earth, lads, while we can use our hands," shouted miller. "once free, we'll speak a word or two as we move south. when we are down, each man must determine for himself his course of action. we can either follow the wall round to the main entrance and give ourselves up to the guard again, or we can turn our faces to the night and trust in god."

no man answered, but the living ladder was formed, and knapps, taking a firm grip of the wall, lowered himself half over. cuffee slipped down and held the sailor's ankles, and the others, one by one, thus lowered themselves to the ground. then knapps, hanging to the full extent of his reach, let go, and those on the ground stood by to break his fall.

now, face to face with night and tempest, the character of each among that little throng appeared, stripped bare by circumstance.

cuffee was the first to speak. he already wept and whined, as the wind cut him to the bone, and the snow sweeping horizontally over the heath stung through his rags.

"for de lub ob gard, sars, i'se go back afore i've froze into one lump ob black ice! oh, gemmen, we run quick, else we nebber run no more!"

"the chances of life are small," said miller, "and no man will think the worse of another if he turns to the gates. the storm promises to be terrific, and though we might have reached lovey lee's cottage in weather still and clear, 'tis but a forlorn hope now. we are to hold on until we strike young plantations of larch and beech. these we leave on our left, and then keep south-east. 'tis seeking a needle in a bottle of hay, and failure must mean death. let no man start in ignorance."

"for god's sake be moving, sir," pleaded burnham. "whatever happens, we must get abreast of the main gates. then those who will may go to the moor. we shall freeze here while we stand. for my part i return. life is sweet."

"an' me too," said carberry. "i'm fearsome of this weather. my lungs will fail me in a mile. 'tain't no manner of use killing myself for nought. i wants ter see the gate again. t'other side the wall's only prison, but this side's death."

"i'se with you, marse burnham and marse carberry," chattered cuffee. "my legs is gwine so funny, like as if dey belonged to some udder gemman."

"it's suicide, stark," said burnham, as they bent forward and followed the wall. the wind now shrieked past them, and the snow began to change its character. it had been very thick and heavy, and the moor was already an inch deep under it; but the flakes ceased to fall, and dwindled into an icy dust that stabbed like a rain of needles. darkness increased; only by the wall upon their right hands did they know their road.

"my cheek him froze hard!" cried the negro. "oh, my poor mammy!"

stark, with his head down, spoke to miller.

"what do you do, sir?" he asked. "i'm going to make a fight for it; but dare you?"

"i'll come, lad, on one condition: that you do not stay a single step for me. 'tis each for himself. my life matters to no man. and i take it into my hands with all reverence for the giver. if i die, i die a free man."

"'tis so with me," answered the younger; "none will mourn me, for sorrow of heirs is only laughter under a mask. but we'll win, not lose. and 'tis victory either way, whether we live or die."

there remained james knapps, and now stark asked him his purpose.

"waal, i reyther guess i'll hold on," he answered. "i ain't frightened of snow and never stopped hum nights when i could go out. i was a trapper in the rockies once. this weather is old company, and no man kin tell what's behind sich a smother. death or life, 'tis no great odds to me; so i'm for going ahead."

"i hope it don't displeasure you us turning back," panted caleb carberry to stark; "but i'm very wishful ter get home again some day. i've got a wife and family in vermont——"

"then you'd be a knave to hold on," said the other. "i've got nothing in vermont but a good solid chunk of the state itself. the beavers won't miss me, nor yet the maple trees, nor yet my cousins, i'll swear."

when the glare from a great lamp above the main entrance was seen across the snow, three men huddled together in an empty sentry-box near the gates, and three struck strongly forward into the south-east. they held a steady course, and walked in indian file, with the storm on their left sides.

sam cuffee sobbed and screamed.

"poor tings, dey got der marching orders! i nebber see marse stark any more. i wish i born dead!"

"shut your mouth, you black scorpion," said burnham savagely. his heart was with his friends, and now he smarted to think that he had turned. if they lived, they would never respect him more. so he believed. he had always entertained a lively jealousy where stark was concerned. he knew that his messmate was a better man than himself and, eaten by envy, could not pardon his superiority. now in his heart there sprang a base and fleeting hope that stark had departed to die.

"i'se no scorpion," answered cuffee. "i'se only berry dam miserable nigger, sar."

"be silent! do you want the men in the guardhouse to hear us? we're to give commodore miller as much law as we dare without getting ourselves frostbitten. then we can ring the bell and sneak back to kennel—like the hounds we are."

"to the cachot," said carberry. "i kinder guess we'll sleep on granite to-night. snow's softer and warmer, after all's said. but if we sleep here, you bet we shan't wake no more."

"they'll have a pretty down on us now," answered burnham. "we were fools not to go and die with the others."

"de cachot—wid de snow coming in to bury us froo de naked windows! oh, i wish i dead and in hell—it warm dar. i no care for twenty million debbils so long as dey take me into de warm place."

"you'll be warm enough to-morrow. they'll flog us for this when we refuse to say anything about the others," returned william burnham.

"flogging's better'n dying. durn the silly monkeys—they might just as well have cut their throats as go," declared carberry. "i dare say every doodle of 'em's dead by now. miller's a loss to the country for sartain."

in silence they waited another minute; then burnham addressed sam cuffee.

"ring the great bell, nigger; i can't lift my hand to it."

soon the three were back again within the prison walls, and as carberry had expected, a cachot opened frozen jaws for them. untold misery they endured, although a soldier at his own risk fetched them a bundle of straw to spread between their bodies and the stones. commandant cottrell himself directed the punishment.

"as for the others," he said, "we are well quit of the troublesome rascals. they'll be out of further mischief before dawn. nothing could live in this, for satan and all his angels are loose to-night."

上一章    回目录 下一章
阅读记录 书签 书架 返回顶部