A morning walk.
Herbert found it difficult to sleep
from anxiety. He felt that the burden was too
great for him alone to bear, and he desired to speak
on the subject to George Melville. But there was
a difficulty about doing this undetected, on account
of the thinness of the partitions between the rooms.
If he could hear Col. Warner, the latter would
also be able to hear him.
The stage was to start at seven o’clock
the next morning, and before that time some decision
must be made. The first question was, should
they, or should they not, take passage, as they had
anticipated?
At half-past five, Herbert, turning
in bed, found his bedfellow awake.
“Mr. Melville,” he whispered,
“I have something important to communicate,
and cannot do so here on account of the danger of being
heard in the next room. Are you willing to dress
and take a little walk with me before breakfast?”
George Melville’s physical condition
did not make him usually favorable to early rising,
but he knew Herbert well enough to understand that
he had a satisfactory reason for his request.
“Yes, Herbert,” he said, “I will
get up.”
Not a word was exchanged, for Mr.
Melville’s discretion prevailed over his curiosity.
In ten minutes both were fully dressed and descended
the stairs.
There was no one stirring except a
woman, the landlord’s wife, who was lighting
the fire in order to prepare breakfast.
She regarded the two with surprise,
and perhaps a little distrust.
“You’re stirrin’ early, strangers,”
she said.
“Yes,” answered Melville,
courteously, “we are going to take a little
walk before breakfast; it may sharpen our appetites.”
“Humph!” said the woman;
“that’s curious. I wouldn’t
get up so early if I wasn’t obliged. There
ain’t much to see outdoors.”
“It is a new part of the country
to us,” said Melville, “and we may not
have another chance to see it.”
“When will breakfast be ready?” asked
Herbert.
“Half an hour, more or less,” answered
the woman, shortly.
“We will be back in time,” he said.
The landlady evidently thought their
early-rising a singular proceeding, but her suspicions
were not aroused. She resumed her work, and Herbert
and his friend walked out through the open door.
When they had reached a spot a dozen
rods or more distant, Melville turned to his young
clerk and asked:
“Well, Herbert, what is it?”
“I have discovered, Mr. Melville,
that our stage is to be stopped to-day and the passengers
plundered.”
“How did you discover this?” asked Melville,
startled.
“By a conversation which I overheard in the
next chamber to us.”
“But that chamber is occupied by Col. Warner.”
“And he is one of the conspirators,” said
Herbert, quietly.
“Is it possible?” ejaculated
Melville. “Can we have been so deceived
in him? Does he propose to waylay the stage?”
“No, I presume he will be one of the passengers.”
“Tell me all you know about
this matter, Herbert. Who is engaged with him
in this plot?”
“The landlord.”
“I am not much surprised at
this,” said Melville, thoughtfully. “He
is an ill-looking man, whose appearance fits the part
of highwayman very well. Then you think the colonel
is in league with him?”
“I am sure of that. Don’t
you remember how skillfully Col. Warner drew
out of the passengers the hiding places of their money
vesterday?”
“Yes.”
“He has told all to the landlord,
and he will no doubt make use of the knowledge.
That is all, Mr. Melville. I could not rest till
I had told you, so that you might decide what to do.”
“It seems quite providential
that you were kept awake last night, Herbert, otherwise
this blow would have come upon us unprepared.
Even with the knowledge that it impends, I hardly know
what it is best for us to do.”
“We might decide not to go in
the stage,” suggested Hebert.
“But we should have to go to-morrow.
We cannot stay here, and there is no other way of
traveling. As the colonel seems to think I have
money, there would be another attack to-morrow.
Besides, where could we stay except at this hotel,
which is kept, as it appears, by the principal robber.”
“That is true,” said Herbert,
puzzled; “I didn’t think of that.”
“I would quite as soon stand
my chance of being robbed in the stage, as be attacked
here. Besides, I cannot make up my mind to desert
my fellow passengers. It seems cowardly to send
them off to be plundered without giving them a hint
of their danger.”
“Couldn’t we do that?”
“The result would be that they
would not go, and there is no knowing how long we
should be compelled to remain in this secluded spot.”
“Mr. Melville,” said Herbert,
suddenly, “a thought has just struck me.”
“I hope it may show us a way out of our danger.”
“No, I am sorry to say that it won’t do
that.”
“What is it, Herbert?”
“You remember that mention was
made yesterday in the stage of a certain famous bandit
named Jerry Lane?”
“Yes, I remember.”
“Do you think it is possible
that he and Col. Warner may be one and the same?”
“That is certainly a startling
suggestion, Herbert. What reason have you for
thinking so?”
“It was only a guess on my part;
but you remember that the colonel said he was a man
about his size.”
“That might be.”
“And he did not confine himself
to the Western country, but might be met with in New
York, or St. Louis. We met the colonel in Chicago.”
“It may be as you surmise, Herbert,”
said George Melville, after a pause. “It
did occur to me that our worthy landlord might be the
famous outlaw in question, but the description to which
you refer seems to fit the colonel better. There
is one thing, however, that makes me a little incredulous.”
“What is that, Mr. Melville?”
“This Jerry Lane I take to be
cool and courageous, while the colonel appears to
be more of a boaster. He looks like one who can
talk better than he can act. If I had ever seen
a description of his appearance, I could judge better.”
The two had been walking slowly and
thoughtfully, when they were startled by a rough voice.
“You’re out early, strangers?”
Turning swiftly, they saw the dark,
forbidding face of the landlord, who had approached
them unobserved.
“Did he hear anything?” thought Herbert,
anxiously.
“Yes, we are taking a little walk,” said
Melville, pleasantly.
“Breakfast will be ready soon.
You’d better be back soon, if you’re goin’
by the stage this morning. You are goin’,
I reckon?” said the landlord, eyeing them sharply.
“We intend to do so,”
said Melville. “We will walk a little farther,
and then return to the house.”
The landlord turned and retraced his
steps to the Echo Gulch Hotel.
“Do you think he heard anything
that we were saying?” asked Herbert.
“I think not.”
“I wonder what brought him out here?”
“Probably he wanted to make
sure that we were going in the stage. He is laudably
anxious to have as many victims and as much plunder
as possible.”
“You told him you were going in the stage?”
“Yes, I have decided to do so.”
“Have you decided upon anvthing else, Mr. Melville?”
“Not positively; but there will
be time to think of that. Did you hear where
we were to be attacked?”
“At a point about five miles from here,”
said Herbert.
This he had gathered from the conversation he had
overheard.
When the two friends reached the hotel,
they found Col. Warner already downstairs.
“Good-morning, gentlemen!”
he said. “So you have taken a walk?
I never walk before breakfast, for my part.”
“Nor do I often,” said
Melville. “In this case I was persuaded
by my young friend. I am repaid by a good appetite.”
“Can’t I persuade you
to try a glass of bitters, Mr. Melville?” asked
the colonel.
“Thank you, colonel. You will have to excuse
me.”
“Breakfast’s ready!”
announced the landlady, and the stage passengers sat
down at a long, unpainted, wooden table, where the
food was of the plainest. In spite of the impending
peril of which they, only, had knowledge, Herbert
ate heartily, but Melville seemed preoccupied.