To the rescue.
Herbert and his companion drew near
the forest cabin, which had been the home of the former,
without a suspicion that George Melville was in such
dire peril. The boy was, indeed, thinking of him,
but it was rather of the satisfaction his employer
would feel at his good fortune.
“Somehow I feel in a great hurry
to get there, Jack,” said Herbert. “I
shall enjoy telling Mr. Melville of my good luck.”
“He’s a fine chap, that
Melville,” said Jack Holden, meaning no disrespect
by this unceremonious fashion of speech.
“That he is! He’s
the best friend I ever had, Jack,” returned
Herbert, warmly.
“It’s a pity he’s ailing.”
“Oh, he’s much stronger
than he was when he came out here. All the unfavorable
symptoms have disappeared.”
“Maybe he’ll outgrow it.
I had an uncle that was given up to die of consumption,
when he was about Melville’s age, and he died
only last year at the age of seventy-five.”
“That must have been slow consumption,
Jack,” said Herbert, smiling. “If
Mr. Melville can live as long as that, I think neither
he nor his friends will have reason to complain.”
“Is he so rich, lad?”
“I don’t know how rich,
but I know he has plenty of money. How much power
a rich man has,” said Herbert, musingly.
“Now, Mr. Melville has changed my whole life
for me. When I first met him I was working for
three dollars a week. Now I am worth twelve thousand
dollars!”
Herbert repeated this with a beaming
face. The good news had not lost the freshness
of novelty. There was so much that he could do
now that he was comparatively rich. To do Herbert
justice, it was not of himself principally that he
thought. It was sweet to reflect that he could
bring peace, and joy, and independence to his mother.
After all, it is the happiness we confer that brings
us the truest enjoyment. The selfish man who
eats and drinks and lodges like a prince, but is unwilling
to share his abundance with others, knows not what
he loses. Even boys and girls may try the experiment
for themselves, for one does not need to be rich to
give pleasure to others.
“Come, Jack, let us ride faster;
I am in a hurry,” said Herbert, when they were
perhaps a quarter of a mile distant from the cabin.
They emerged from the forest, and
could now see the cottage and its surroundings.
They saw something that almost paralyzed them.
George Melville, with a rope round
his neck, stood beneath a tree. Col. Warner
was up in the tree swinging the rope over a branch,
while Brown, big, burly and brutal, pinioned the helpless
young man in his strong arms.
“Good heavens! Do you see
that?” exclaimed Herbert. “It is the
road agents. Quick, or we shall be too late!”
Jack had seen. He had not only
seen, but he had already acted. Quick as thought
he raised his weapon, and covered Brown. There
was a sharp report, and the burly ruffian fell, his
heart pierced by the unerring bullet.
Herbert dashed forward, and, seizing
the rope, released his friend.
“Thank Heaven, Herbert!
You have saved my life!” murmured Melville,
in tones of heartfelt gratitude.
“There’s another of them!”
exclaimed Jack Holden, looking up into the tree, and
he raised his gun once more.
“Don’t shoot!” exclaimed
the man, whom we know best as Col. Warner; “I’ll
come down.”
So he did, but not in the manner he
expected. In his flurry, for he was not a brave
man, outlaw though he was, he lost his hold and fell
at the feet of Holden.
“What shall we do with him,
Mr. Melville?” asked Jack. “He deserves
to die.”
“Don’t kill him!
Bind him, and give him up to the authorities.”
“I hate to let him off so easy,”
said Jack, but he did as Melville wished. But
the colonel had a short reprieve. On his way to
jail, a bullet from some unknown assailant pierced
his temple, and Jerry Lane, the notorious road agent,
died, as he had lived, by violence.