"It is doing its duty," replied his wife, calmly watching his agonies. "You will soon be easier."
"Perhaps I shall—in death," groaned the sufferer. "I am parched with thirst. Give me a glass of water."
"You shall have wine, Matthew, if you prefer it. I have a flask in my pocket," she replied. "But what of the treasure—where is it?"
"Peace!" he cried. "I will baulk your avaricious hopes. You shall never know where it is."
"I shall know as much as you do," she rejoined, in a tone of incredulity. "I don't believe a word you tell me. You have found no treasure."
"If this is the last word I shall ever utter, I have," he returned; —"a mighty treasure. But you shall never possess it—never!—ah! ah!"
"Nor shall you have the wine," she replied; "there is water for you," she added, handing him a jug, which he drained with frantic eagerness. "He is a dead man," she muttered.
"I am chilled to the heart," grasped the sexton, shivering from head to foot, while chill damps gathered on his brow. "I have done wrong in drinking the water, and you ought not to have given it me."
"You asked for it," she replied. "You should have had wine but for your obstinacy. But I will save you yet, if you will tell me where to find the treasure."
"Look for it in my grave," he returned, with a hideous grin.