The Greatest Adventure Books - MacLeod Raine Edition. William MacLeod Raine
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The Highlander flushed, stammering out:
“For your proffered loan, I accept it with the best will in the world; and as to your offer of a hiding-place, troth! I’m badly needing one. Gin it were no inconvenience——”
“None in the world.”
“I will be remembering you for a generous foe till the day of my death. You’re a man to ride the water wi’.”
“Lard! There’s no generosity in it. Every Mohawk thinks it a pleasure to help any man break the laws. Besides, I count on you to help drive away the doldrums. Do you care for a hand at piquet now, Captain?”
“With pleasure. I find in the cartes great diversion, but by your leave I’ll first unloose your man Watkins.”
“’Slife, I had forgot him. We’ll have him brew us a punch and make a night of it. Sleep and I are a thousand miles apart.”
3. The material for this chapter was furnished me with great particularity by Captain Donald Roy Macdonald. From his narrative to me, I set down the story in substance as he told it.
Chapter XVII
The Valley of the Shadow
There came to me one day a surprise, a marked hour among my weeks struck calm. Charles, Cloe, and Aileen had been wont to visit me regularly; once Selwyn had dropped in on me; but I had not before been honoured by a visit from Sir Robert Volney. He sauntered into my cell swinging a clouded cane, dressed to kill and point device in every ruffle, all dabbed with scented powder, pomatum, and jessamine water. To him, coming direct from the strong light of the sun, my cell was dark as the inside of Jonah’s whale. He stood hesitating in the doorway, groping with his cane for some guide to his footsteps.
For an instant I drew back, thinking he had come to mock me; then I put the idea from me. However much of evil there was in him, Volney was not a small man. I stepped forward to greet him.
“Welcome to my poor best, Sir Robert! If I do not offer you a chair it is because I have none. My regret is that my circumstances hamper my hospitality.”
“Not at all. You offer me your best, and in that lies the essence of hospitality. Better a dinner of herbs where love is than a stalled ox and hatred, Egad,” returned my guest with easy irony.
All the resources of the courtier and the beau were his. One could but admire the sparkle and the versatility of the man. His wit was brilliant as the play of a rapier’s point. Set down in cold blood, remembered scantily and clumsily as I recall it, without the gay easy polish of his manner, the fineness is all out of his talk. After all ’tis a characteristic of much wit that it is apposite to the occasion only and loses point in the retelling.
He seated himself on the table with a leg dangling in air and looked curiously around on the massive masonry, the damp floor, the walls oozing slime. I followed his eye and in some measure his thoughts.
“Stone walls do not a prison make,” I quoted gaily.
“Ecod, they make a pretty fair imitation of one!” he chuckled.
I was prodigious glad to see him.
His presence stirred my sluggish blood. The sound of his voice was to me like the crack of a whip to a jaded horse. Graceful, careless, debonair, a man of evil from sheer reckless wilfulness, he was the one person in the world I found it in my heart to both hate and admire at the same time.
He gazed long at me. “You’re looking devilish ill, Montagu,” he said.
I smiled. “Are you afraid I’ll cheat the hangman after all?”
His eyes wandered over the cell again. “By Heaven, this death’s cage is enough to send any man off the hooks,” he shivered.
“One gets used to it,” I answered, shrugging.
He looked at me with a kind of admiration. “They may break you, Montagu, but I vow they will never bend you. Here are you torn with illness, the shadow of the gallows falling across your track, and never a whimper out of you.”
“Would that avail to better my condition?”
“I suppose not. Still, self-pity is the very ecstasy of grief, they tell me.”
“For girls and halfling boys, I dare say.”
There he sat cocked on the table, a picture of smiling ease, raffish and fascinating, as full of sentimental sympathy as a lass in her teens. His commiseration was no less plain to me because it was hidden under a debonair manner. He looked at me in a sidelong fashion with a question in his eyes.
“Speak out!” I told him. “Your interest in me as evidenced by this visit has earned the right to satisfy your curiosity.”
“I dare swear you have had your chance to save yourself?” he asked.
“Oh, the usual offer! A life for a life, the opportunity to save myself by betraying others.”
“Do you never dally with the thought of it?” he questioned.
I looked up quickly at him. A hundred times I had nursed the temptation and put it from me.
“Are you never afraid, Montagu, when the night falls black and slumber is not to be wooed?”
“Many a time,” I told him, smiling.
“You say it as easily as if I had asked whether you ever took the air in the park. ’Slife, I have never known you flinch. There was always a certain d——d rough plainness about you, but you play the game.”
“’Tis a poor hound falls whining at the whip when there is no avoiding it.”
“You will never accept their offer of a pardon on those terms. I know you, man. Y’are one of those fools hold by honour rather than life, and damme! I like you for it. Now I in your place——”
“——Would do as I do.”
“Would I? I’m not so sure. If I did it would be no virtue, but an obstinacy not to be browbeat.” Then he added, “You would give anything else on earth for your life, I suppose?”
“Anything else,” I told him frankly.
“Anything else?” he repeated, his eyes narrowing. “No reservations, Montagu?”
Our eyes crossed like rapiers,