Mrs. Knapp was silent for a little, as if this contingency had not entered her plans.
“We must follow him and save him, even if we have to raise the whole county to do it.” Her voice was firm and resolute.
“What would happen to the boy if he were taken?” I found courage to ask.
“He would not live a month,” she replied.
“Would he be murdered?”
“I don't know how the end would come. But I know he would die.”
I was in the shadow of the mystery. A hundred questions rose to my lips; but behind them all frowned the grim wolf-visage of Doddridge Knapp, and I could not find the courage that could make me speak to them.
“Mrs. Knapp,” I said, “you have called me by my name. I had almost forgotten that I had ever borne it. I have lived more in the last month than in the twenty-five years that I remember before it, and I have almost come to think that the old name belongs to some one else. May I ask how you got hold of it?”
“It was simple enough. Henry had told me about you. I remembered that you were coming from the same town he had come from. I telegraphed to an agent in Boston. He went up to your place, made his inquiries and telegraphed me. I suppose you will be pleased to know,” she continued with a droll affectation of malice in her voice, “that he mailed me your full history as gathered from the town pump. It is at the house now.”
“I trust it is nothing so very disreputable,” I said modestly, raking my memory hastily for any likely account of youthful escapades.