The Courage of Captain Plum eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 203 pages of information about The Courage of Captain Plum.

The Courage of Captain Plum eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 203 pages of information about The Courage of Captain Plum.

“I’m devilish sorry—­for you—­Nat—­” he said.

His words came with painful slowness.  There was a grating huskiness in his voice.

“This damned rawhide—­is pinching—­my Adam’s apple—­”

He smiled.  His white teeth gleamed, his eyes laughed, and with a heart bursting with grief Nathaniel looked away from him.  He had seen courage, but never like this, and deep down in his soul he prayed—­prayed that death might come to him first, so that he might not have to look upon the agonies of this other, whose end would be ghastly in its fearless resignation.  His own suffering had become excruciating.  Sharp pains darted like red-hot needles through his limbs, his back tortured him, and his head ached as though a knife had cloven the base of his skull.  Still—­he could breathe.  By pressing his head against the post it was not difficult for him to fill his lungs with air.  But the strength of his limbs was leaving him.  He no longer felt any sensation in his cramped feet.  His knees were numb.  He measured the paralysis of death creeping up his legs inch by inch, driving the sharp pains before it, until suddenly his weight tottered under him and he hung heavily upon the thong about his throat.  For a full half minute he ceased to breathe, and a feeling of ineffable relief swept over him, for during those few seconds his body was at rest.  He found that by a backward contortion he could bring himself erect again, and that for a few minutes after each respite it was not so difficult for him to stand.

After a third effort he turned again toward Neil.  A groan of horror rose to his imprisoned lips.  His companion’s face was full upon him, ghastly white; his eyes were wide and staring, like balls of shimmering glass in the starlight, and his throat was straining at the fatal rawhide!  Nathaniel heard no sound, saw no stir of life in the inanimate figure.

A moaning, wordless cry broke through the cloth that gagged him.

At the sound of that cry, faint, terrifying, with all the horror that might fill a human soul in its inarticulate note, a shudder of life passed into Neil’s body.  Weakly he flung himself back, stood poised for an instant against the stake, then fell again upon the deadly thong.  Twice—­three times he made the effort, and failed.  And to Nathaniel, staring wild eyed and silent now, the spectacle was one that seemed to blast the very soul within him and send his blood in rushing torrents of fire to his sickened brain.  Neil was dying!  A fourth time he struggled back.  A fifth—­and he held his ground.  Even in that passing instant something like a flash of his buoyant smile flickered in his face and there came to Nathaniel’s ears like a throttled whisper—­his name.

“Nat—­”

And no more.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Courage of Captain Plum from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.