The Heart - Page 128/151

Then that sound and all others grew dim, for I was near swooning,

and when the door fell with a mighty crash near me, it might have

been the fall of a rose leaf on velvet, and I had small heed of the

fierce faces which bent over me, yet the hands extended toward my

wounds were tender enough. And I saw as in a dream, Capt. Robert

Waller, with his arm tied up, and wondered dimly if we were both

dead, for I verily believed that I had killed him, and I heard him

say, and his voice sounded as if a sea rolled between us, "'Tis the

convict tutor, Wingfield, who held the door, and unless I be much

mistaken, he hath his death-wound. Make a litter and lift him

gently, and five of you search the house for whatever other rebels

be hid herein."

And as I live, in the midst of my faintness, which made all sounds

far away as from beyond the boundary of the flesh, and beyond the

din of battle, which was still going on, though feebly, like a fire

burning to its close, I heard the dip of oars on the creek, and knew

that Mary Cavendish was safe.

A litter they fashioned from a lid of a chest while the search was

going on, and I was lifted upon it with due regard to my wounds,

which I thought a generous thing of Captain Waller, inasmuch as his

own face was frowning with the pain of the wound which I had given

him, but he was a brave man, and a brave man is ever a generous foe.

But when I was on the litter, breathing hard, yet with some

consciousness, he bent close over me, and whispered "Sir, your

wounds are bound up with strips torn from a woman's linen. I have a

wife, and I know. Who was in hiding here, sir?"

My eyes flew wide open at that.

"No one," I gasped out. "No one as I live."

But he laughed, and bending still lower, whispered, "Have no fear as

to that, Master Wingfield. Convict or not, you are a brave man, and

that which you perchance gave your life to hide, shall be hidden for

all Robert Waller."

So saying he gave the order to carry me forth with as little jolting

as might be, and stationed himself at my side lest I come to harm

from some over-zealous soldier. But in truth the militia and the

officers in those days were apparently of somewhat uncertain

quantity as regarded their allegiance to the King or the Colony.