Capitolas Peril - Page 114/218

Oh! when she's angry, she is keen and shrewd;

She was a vixen when she went to school;

And though she is but little she is fierce.

Shakespeare

It was quite late in the evening when Jem, her messenger, returned.

"Have you an answer?" she impetuously demanded, rising to meet him as

he entered.

"Yes, miss, here it is," replied the boy, handing a neatly folded,

highly perfumed little note.

"Go," said Cap, curtly, as she received it.

And when the boy had bowed and withdrawn, she threw herself into a

chair, and with little respect for the pretty device of the pierced

heart with which the note was sealed, she tore it open and devoured its

contents.

Why did Capitola's cheeks and lips blanch white as death? Why did her

eyes contract and glitter like stilettoes? Why was her breath drawn

hard and laboriously through clenched teeth and livid lips?

That note was couched in the most insulting terms.

Capitola's first impulse was to rend the paper to atoms and grind those

atoms to powder beneath her heel. But a second inspiration changed her

purpose.

"No--no--no! I will not destroy you, precious little note! No legal

document involving the ownership of the largest estate, no cherished

love letter filled with vows of undying affection, shall be more

carefully guarded! Next to my heart shall you lie. My shield and

buckler shall you be! My sure defense and justification! I know what to

do with you, my precious little jewel! You are the warrant for the

punishment of that man, signed by his own hand." And so saying Capitola

carefully deposited the note in her bosom.

Then she lighted her chamber lamp, and, taking it with her, went

down-stairs to her uncle's bedroom.

Taking advantage of the time when she knew he would be absorbed in a

game of chess with John Stone, and she should be safe from interruption

for several hours if she wished, she went to Major Warfield's little

armory in the closet adjoining his room, opened his pistol case and

took from it a pair of revolvers, closed and locked the case, and

withdrew and hid the key that they might not chance to be missed until

she should have time to replace them.

Then she hurried back into her own chamber, locked the pistols up in

her own drawer, and, wearied out with so much excitement, prepared to

go to rest. Here a grave and unexpected obstacle met her; she had

always been accustomed to kneel and offer up to heaven her evening's

tribute of praise and thanksgiving for the mercies of the day, and

prayers for protection and blessing through the night.