The Wild Olive eBook

Basil King
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 377 pages of information about The Wild Olive.

The Wild Olive eBook

Basil King
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 377 pages of information about The Wild Olive.

Once more Ford was unable to catch what was said in reply, but once more the lady’s speech enlightened him.

“That’s the worst of it?  Possibly; but it’s also the best of it; for since it relieves you of responsibility it’s foolish for you to feel remorse.”

What was the motive of these remarks?  Ford found himself possessed of a strange curiosity to know.  He pressed as closely as he dared to the open door, but for the moment nothing more was said.  In the silence that followed he began again to wonder how he could best make his demand for food, when a sound from behind startled him.  It was the sound which, among all others, caused him the wildest alarm—­that of a human footstep.  His next movement came from the same blind impulse that sends a hunted fox to take refuge in a church—­eager only for the instant’s safety.  He had sprung to his feet, cleared the threshold, and leaped into the room, before the reflection came to him that, if he was caught, he must at least be caught game.  Wheeling round toward the window-door through which he had entered, he stood defiantly, awaiting his pursuers, and heedless of the astonished eyes fixed upon him.  It was not till some seconds had gone by, and he realized that he was not followed, that he glanced about the room.  When he did so it was to ignore the woman, in order to concentrate all his gaze on the little, iron-gray man who, still seated, stared at him, with lips parted.  In his own turn, Norrie Ford was dumb and wide-eyed in amazement It was a long minute before either spoke.

“You?”

“You?”

The monosyllable came simultaneously from each.  The little woman got to her feet in alarm.  There was inquiry as well as terror in her face—­inquiry to which her husband felt prompted to respond.

“This is the man,” he said, in a voice of forced calmness, “whom—­whom—­we’ve been talking about.”

“Not the man—­you—?”

“Yes,” he nodded, “the man I—­I—­sentenced to death—­this morning.”

II

“Evie!”

Mrs. Wayne went to the door, but on Ford’s assurance that her child had nothing to fear from him, she paused with her hand on the knob to look in curiosity at this wild young man, whose doom lent him a kind of fascination.  Again, for a minute, all three were silent in the excess of their surprise.  Wayne himself sat rigid, gazing up at the new-comer with strained eyes blurred with partial blindness.  Though slightly built and delicate, he was not physically timid; and as the seconds went by he was able to form an idea as to what had happened.  He himself, in view of the tumultuous sympathy displayed by hunters and lumber-jacks with the man who passed for their boon companion, had advised Ford’s removal from the pretty toy prison of the county-town to the stronger one at Plattsville.  It was clear that the prisoner had been helped to escape, either before the change had been effected or while it was taking place.  There was nothing surprising in that; the astonishing thing was that the fugitive should have found his way to this house above all others.  Mrs. Wayne seemed to think so too, for it was she who spoke first, in a tone which she tried to make peremptory, in spite of its tremor of fear.

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Project Gutenberg
The Wild Olive from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.