Capitolas Peril - Page 85/218

Feared, shunned, belied ere youth had lost her force,

He hated men too much to feel remorse,

And thought the vice of wrath a sacred call,

To pay the injuries of some on all.

There was a laughing devil in his sneer,

That caused emotions both of rage and fear:

And where his frown of hatred darkly fell,

Hope, withering fled and mercy sighed farewell!

Byron

Herbert Greyson had been correct in his conjecture concerning the cause

of Colonel Le Noir's conduct in absenting himself from the trial, or

appearing there only in the person of his attorney. A proud, vain,

conceited man, full of Joseph Surfacisms, he could better have borne to

be arraigned upon the charge of murder than to face the accusation of

baseness that was about to be proved upon him. Being reasonably certain

as to what was likely to be the decision of the Orphans' Court, he was

not disappointed in hearing that judgment had been rendered in favor of

his ward and her friends. His one great disappointment had been upon

discovering the flight of Clara. For when he had ascertained that she

had fled, he knew that all was lost--and lost through Capitola, the

hated girl for whose destruction he had now another and a stronger

motive--revenge!

In this mood of mind three days before his departure to join his

regiment he sought the retreat of the outlaw. He chose an early hour of

the evening as that in which he should be most likely to find Black

Donald.

It was about eight o'clock when he wrapped his large cloak around his

tall figure, pulled his hat low over his sinister brow and set out to

walk alone to the secret cavern in the side of the Demon's Punch Bowl.

The night was dark and the path dangerous; but his directions had been

careful, so that when he reached the brink of that awful abyss he knew

precisely where to begin his descent with the least danger of being

precipitated to the bottom.

And by taking a strong hold upon the stunted saplings of pine and cedar

that grew down through the clefts of the ravine, and placing his feet

firmly upon the points of projecting rocks, he contrived to descend the

inside of that horrible abyss, which from the top seemed to be fraught

with certain death to any one daring enough to make the attempt.

When about half-way down the precipice he reached the clump of cedar

bushes growing in the deep cleft, and concealing the hole that formed

the entrance to the cavern.

Here he paused, and, looking through the entrance into a dark and

apparently fathomless cavern, he gave the peculiar signal whistle,

which was immediately answered from within by the well-known voice of

the outlaw chief, saying: "All right, my colonel! Give us your hand! Be careful, now, the floor

of this cavern is several feet below the opening."