“And now,” said Habersham, “what we’ve got to do is to make a run for it and land him across the border, and stick him into a North Carolina jail, where he rightfully belongs. The question is, can we do it all in one night, or had we better lock him up somewhere on this side the line and take another night for it? The sheriff over there in Kildare is Appleweight’s cousin, but we’ll lock him up with Bill, to make a family party of it.”
“We’d better not try too much to-night,” counselled Griswold. “It’s a big thing to have the man himself. If it were not for the matter of putting Governor Dangerfield in a hole, I’d favour hurrying with Appleweight to Columbia, just for the moral effect of it on the people of South Carolina. We’d make a big killing for the administration that way, Habersham.”
“Yes, you’d make a killing all right, but you’d have Bill Appleweight on your hands, which Governor Osborne has not until lately been anxious for,” replied Habersham, in a low tone that was heard by no one but his old preceptor.
“You’d better get over the idea that we’re afraid of this outlaw,” rejoined Griswold. “The governor of North Carolina dare not call his soul his own where these hill people are concerned; but the governor of South Carolina is a different sort.”
“The governor of North Carolina is filling the newspapers with his own virtuous intentions in the matter,” remarked Habersham, “but his sudden zeal puts one upon inquiry.”
“I hope you don’t imply that the motives of the governor of South Carolina are not the worthiest?” demanded Griswold hotly.
“Most certainly not!” returned the prosecuting attorney; but a smile flitted across his face—a smile which, in the darkness, Griswold did not see. “The two governors are very different men—wholly antipodal characters, in fact,” and again Habersham smiled to himself.
While they thus stood on South Carolina soil, waiting for the safe and complete dispersion of the Mount Nebo congregation before seizing the captive they had gagged and tied at the rear of the little church, the fates were ordering a very different termination of the night’s business.
Miss Jerry Dangerfield, galloping away from the Duke of Ballywinkle, with no thought but to widen the distance between them, turned off at the first cross-road, which began well enough, but degenerated rapidly into a miserable trail, through which she was obliged to walk her horse. Before she was aware of it she was in the midst of a clearing where labourers had lately been cutting timber, and she found, on turning to make her way out, that she was quite lost, for three trails, all seemingly alike, struck off into the forest. She spoke aloud to the horse to reassure herself, and smiled as she viewed the grim phalanx of stumps. She must, however, find her way back to Ardsley, for there were times when Jerry Dangerfield could be very serious with herself, though it rarely pleased her to be serious with other people; and she knew that the time had long passed for her return to the house. If her conspiracy with Thomas Ardmore had proved successful, the duke would not return to the great house; but her own prolonged absence was something that had not been in her programme.
She did not know then that three men had witnessed her flight from the duke, or that they had taken swift vengeance upon him for his unpardonable conduct in the moon-blanched road. It was not Jerry’s way to accept misfortune tamely, and after circling the wall of timber that shut her in, in the hope of determining where she had entered, she chose a trail at random and plunged into the woods. She assumed that probably all the roads and paths on the estate led more or less directly, to the great house or to some lodge or bungalow. She had lost her riding-crop in her mad flight, and she broke off a switch, tossing its leaves into the moonlight and laughing softly as they rained about her.