Van Bibber and Others eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 194 pages of information about Van Bibber and Others.

Van Bibber and Others eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 194 pages of information about Van Bibber and Others.

“I don’t know.  How can I tell?” said the reporter, sharply.  He was strangely nervous and upset.  He could see no way out of it.  The girl seemed to be telling the truth, and yet the man’s wife was with him and by his side, as she should be, and this woman had no place on the scene, and could mean nothing but trouble to herself and to every one else.  “Come,” he said, abruptly, “we had better be getting up there.  It’s only five minutes of twelve.”

The girl turned with a quick start, and walked on ahead of them up the drive leading between the snow-covered grass-plots that stretched from the pavement to the wall of the prison.  She moved unsteadily and slowly, and Bronson saw that she was shivering, either from excitement or the cold.

“I guess,” said Gallegher, in an awed whisper, “that there’s going to be a scrap.”

“Shut up,” said Bronson.

They stopped a few yards before the great green double gate, with a smaller door cut in one of its halves, and with the light from a big lantern shining down on them.  They could not see the clock-face from where they stood, and when Bronson took out his watch and looked at it, the girl turned her face to his appealingly, but did not speak.

“It will be only a little while now,” he said, gently.  He thought he had never seen so much trouble and fear and anxiety in so young a face, and he moved towards her and said, in a whisper, as though those inside could hear him, “Control yourself if you can,” and then added, doubtfully, and still in a whisper, “You can take my arm if you need it.”  The girl shook her head dumbly, but took a step nearer him, as if for protection, and turned her eyes fearfully towards the gate.  The minutes passed on slowly but with intense significance, and they stood so still that they could hear the wind playing through the wires of the electric light back of them, and the clicking of the icicles as they dropped from the edge of the prison wall to the stones at their feet.

And then slowly and laboriously, and like a knell, the great gong of the prison sounded the first stroke of twelve; but before it had counted three there came suddenly from all the city about them a great chorus of clanging bells and the shrieks and tooting of whistles and the booming of cannon.  From far down town the big bell of the State-house, with its prestige and historic dignity back of it, tried to give the time, but the other bells raced past it, and beat out on the cold crisp air joyously and uproariously from Kensington to the Schuylkill; and from far across the Neck, over the marshes and frozen ponds, came the dull roar of the guns at the navy-yard, and from the Delaware the hoarse tootings of the ferry-boats, and the sharp shrieks of the tugs, until the heavens seemed to rock and swing with the great welcome.

Gallegher looked up quickly with a queer, awed smile.

“It’s Christmas,” he said, and then he nodded doubtfully towards Bronson and said, “Merry Christmas, sir.”

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Project Gutenberg
Van Bibber and Others from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.