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.

The old man’s lips twitched and a convulsive shudder shook his body.

“When everything came back to me I was older—­much older,” he went on.  “My hair was white.  I was like an old man.  My people had found me and they told me that I had been mad for three years, Nat—­mad—­mad—­mad! and that a great surgeon had operated on my head, where they struck me—­and brought me back to reason.  Nat—­Nat—­” He strained to raise himself, gasping excitedly.  “God, I was like you then, Nat!  I went back to fight for my Jean.  She was gone.  Nobody knew me, for I was an old man.  I hunted from settlement to settlement.  In my madness I became a Mormon, for vengeance—­in hope of finding her.  I was rich, and I became powerful.  I was made an elder because of my gold.  Then I found—­”

A moan trembled on the old man’s lips.

“—­they had forced her to marry—­the son of a Mormon—­”

He stopped, and for a moment his eyes seemed filling with the glazed shadows of death.  He roused himself almost fiercely.

“But he loved my Jean, Nat—­he loved her as I loved her—­and he was a good man!”, he whispered shrilly.  “Quick—­quick—­I must tell you—­they had tried to escape from Missouri and the Danites killed him,—­and Joseph Smith wanted Jean and at the last moment she killed herself to save her honor as Marion was going to do, and she left two children—­”

He coughed and blood flecked his lips.

“She left—­Marion and Neil!”

He sank back, ashen white and still, and with a cry Nathaniel turned to the lieutenant.  The officer ran forward with a flask in his hand.

“Give him this!”

The touch of liquor to Obadiah’s lips revived him.  He whispered weakly.

“The children, Nat—­I tried to find them—­and years after—­I did—­in Nauvoo.  The man and woman who had killed the father in their own house had taken them and were raising them as their own.  I went mad!  Vengeance—­vengeance—­I lived for it, year after year.  I wanted the children—­but if I took them all would be lost.  I followed them, watched them, loved them—­and they loved me.  I would wait—­wait—­until my vengeance would fall like the hand of God, and then I would free them, and tell them how beautiful their mother was.  When Joseph Smith was killed and the split came the old folks followed Strang—­and I—­I too—­”

He rested a moment, breathing heavily.

“I brought my Jean with me and buried her up there on the hill—­the middle grave, Nat, the middle grave—­Marion’s mother.”

Nathaniel pressed the liquor to the old man’s lips again.

“My vengeance was at hand—­I was almost ready—­when Strang learned a part of the secret,” he continued with an effort.  “He found the old people were murderers.  When Marion would not become his wife he told her what they had done.  He showed her the evidence!  He threatened them with death unless Marion became his wife.  His sheriffs watched them night and day.  He named the hour of their doom—­unless Marion yielded to him.  And to save them, her supposed parents—­to keep the terrible knowledge of their crime from Neil—­Marion—­was—­going—­to—­sacrifice—­herself—­when—­”

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