'Don't waste your time on him, Alice,' said the Colonel, kindly; 'he isn't worth the rope that'll hang him.'
'He was bleeding to death; he must have care or he'll die,' said the octoroon woman.
'Then let him die, d—— him,' replied the Colonel, advancing to where the Overseer lay, and bending down to satisfy himself of his condition.
Meanwhile more than two hundred dusky forms crowded around and filled every opening of the old building. Every conceivable emotion, except pity, was depicted on their dark faces. The same individuals whose cloudy visages a half-hour before I had seen distended with a wild mirth and careless jollity, that made me think them really the docile, good-natured animals they are said to be, now glared on the prostrate Overseer with the infuriated rage of aroused beasts when springing on their prey.
'You can't come the possum here. Get up, you —— hound,' said the Colonel, rising and striking the bleeding man with his foot.
The fellow raised himself on one elbow and gazed around with a stupid, vacant look. His eye wandered unsteadily for a moment from the Colonel to the throng of cloudy faces in the doorway; then, his recent experience flashing upon him, he shrieked out, clinging wildly to the skirts of the octoroon woman, who was standing near, 'Keep off them cursed hounds,—keep them off, I say—they'll kill me!—they'll kill me!'
One glance satisfied me that his mind was wandering. The blow on the head had shattered his reason, and made the strong man less than a child.
'You shan't be killed yet,' said the Colonel. 'You've a small account to settle with me before you reckon with the devil.'
At this moment the dark crowd in the doorway parted, and Jake entered, his arm bound up and in a sling.
'Jake, come here,' said the Colonel; 'this man would have killed you. What shall we do with him?'