Hatchie, the Guardian Slave; or, The Heiress of Bellevue eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 340 pages of information about Hatchie, the Guardian Slave; or, The Heiress of Bellevue.

Hatchie, the Guardian Slave; or, The Heiress of Bellevue eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 340 pages of information about Hatchie, the Guardian Slave; or, The Heiress of Bellevue.
kindly sympathy had cheered his heart in many of the severest of earth’s trials.  They had passed through peril and poverty together, and now the cup of tribulation seemed full to the brim.  They were doomed to death,—­not to the death of the malefactor, but as victims of private interest.  No friendly jailer had been near, to bring them even a cup of cold water to assuage their consuming thirst.  Not a morsel of food had they tasted since their incarceration!  The terrible doom to which they were consigned was too apparent; there was nothing to foreshadow even the slightest hope of redemption.  A few days’ intercourse with their inhuman persecutor had demonstrated too plainly that he was equal to any crime which his own safety demanded.

The female turned uneasily upon her rude and filthy bed.  Her companion bent over her, and, as a flood of tears poured from his sunken eyes, he imprinted a kiss upon her pale cheek.

“Do you feel no better, Delia?” asked he, tenderly.

“Alas, no!  The sands of life are fast ebbing out.  O, for a single drop of cold water!”

“God in heaven! must I see her die, with no power to save?” exclaimed Dalhousie,—­for it was he,—­striking his hands violently upon his forehead.

“Do not let me distress you, Francois!  Let me die!—­I am ready to die,” said she, faintly.

Dalhousie could make no reply.  His emotions were too powerful to permit his utterance.  Maddened by despair, into which the terrible situation of his cherished wife had plunged him, he paced the jail with long strides, gazing about him, as if to seek some desperate remedy for his woes.  Escape had scarcely presented itself to his mind.  He had not the energy of character which rises superior to every ill, and had bent himself supinely to the fate which awaited him.  To work through the solid walls of the jail seemed to him an impossibility, even if provided with the necessary implements.  The scheme was too vast for his mind, unaccustomed, as it was, to contend with great difficulties.

Despair seemed to create, at this moment, a new man within him, armed with energy to break through every obstacle which might oppose him.  His feeble, suffering companion demanded an effort for her relief, and such a demand even his supine nature could not resist.

Near one side of the jail was a shallow pit, which had, apparently, been quite recently excavated.  In it lay the shovel with which the earth had been thrown out.

Dalhousie fixed his eyes upon the pit.  A new thought animated him. “I began to dig that pit for gold; I will continue it for water,” muttered he, as he seized the shovel, and commenced digging.  Awhile he labored with the energy of desperation; but, enfeebled by long fasting, and unused to such severe toil, he soon felt his strength give way.  It appeared to be his only hope, the only ministration of comfort to the loved one beside him, and he strove manfully against the weakness which

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Hatchie, the Guardian Slave; or, The Heiress of Bellevue from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.