Sergeant Tom’s eyes opened slowly and looked dazedly before him for a minute. Then they fell on Pierre. At first there was no recognition, then they became consciously clearer. “Pretty Pierre, you here in the barracks!” he said. He put his hand to his head, then rubbed his eyes roughly and looked up again. This time he saw Jen and her father. His bewilderment increased. Then he added: “What is the matter? Have I been asleep? What—!” He remembered. He staggered to his feet and felt his pockets quickly and anxiously for his letter. It was gone.
“The letter!” he said. “My orders! Who has robbed me? Faith, I remember. I could not keep awake after I drank the coffee. My papers are gone, I tell you, Galbraith,” he said, fiercely.
Then he turned to Jen: “You are not in this, Jen. Tell me.”
She was silent for a moment, then was about to answer, when he turned to the gambler and said: “You are at the bottom of this. Give me my papers.” But Pierre and Galbraith were as dumbfounded as the Sergeant himself to know that the letter was gone. They were stunned beyond speech when Jen said, flushing: “No, Sergeant Tom, I am the thief. When I could not wake you, I took the letter from your pocket and carried it to Inspector Jules last night,—or, rather, Sergeant Gellatly carried them. I wore his cap and cloak and passed for him.”
“You carried that letter to Inspector Jules last night, Jen”? said the soldier, all his heart in his voice.
Jen saw her father blanch, his mouth open blankly, and his lips refuse to utter the words on them. For the first time she comprehended some danger to him, to herself—to Val!
“Father, father,” she said,—“what is it?”
Pierre shrugged his shoulders and rejoined: “Eh, the devil! Such mistakes of women. They are fools—all.” The old man put out a shaking hand and caught his daughter’s arm. His look was of mingled wonder and despair, as he said, in a gasping whisper, “You carried that letter to Archangel’s Rise?”
“Yes,” she answered, faltering now; “Sergeant Tom had said how important it was, you remember. That it was his duty to take it to Inspector Jules, and be back within forty-eight hours. He fell asleep. I could not wake him. I thought, what if he were my brother—our Val. So, when you and Pretty Pierre went to bed, I put on Val’s clothes, took Sergeant Tom’s cloak and hat, carried the orders to Jules, and was back here by six o’clock this morning.”
Sergeant Tom’s eyes told his tale of gratitude. He made a step towards her; but the old man, with a strange ferocity, motioned him back, saying,