“There!” said Bill, impolitely dropping his burden upon a pile of straw in the corner of the rather extensive cave at the end of the passage; “wonder if the little fool is dead. She ought to be coming to by this time.”
“She’s got her eyes wide open,” uttered the raucous voice on the opposite side; and Rosalie turned her eyes in that direction. She looked for a full minute as if spellbound with terror, her gaze centred at the most repulsive human face she ever had seen—the face of Davy’s mother.
The woman was a giantess, a huge, hideous creature with the face of a man, hairy and bloated. Her unkempt hair was grey almost to whiteness, her teeth were snags, and her eyes were almost hidden beneath the shaggy brow. There was a glare of brutal satisfaction in them that appalled the girl.
For the first time since the adventure began her heart failed her, and she shuddered perceptibly as her lids fell.
“What the hell are you skeering her fer like that, ma,” growled Davy. “Don’t look at her like that, or—”
“See here, my boy, don’t talk like that to me if you don’t want me to kick your head off right where you stand. I’m your mother, Davy, an’—”
“That’ll do. This ain’t no time to chew the rag,” muttered Sam. “We’re done fer. Get us something to eat an’ something to drink, old woman; give the girl a nifter, too. She’s fainted, I reckon. Hurry up; I want to turn in.”
“Better untie her hands—see if she’s froze,” added Bill savagely.
Roughly the old woman slashed the bonds from the girl’s hands and feet and then looked askance at Sam, who stood warming his hands over a kerosene stove not far away. He nodded his head, and she instantly untied the cloth that covered Rosalie’s mouth.
“It won’t do no good to scream, girl. Nobody’ll hear ye but us—and we’re your friends,” snarled the old woman.
“Let her yell if she wants to, Maude. It may relieve her a bit,” said Sam, meaning to be kind. Instinctively Rosalie looked about for the person addressed as Maude. There was but one woman in the gang. Maude! That was the creature’s name. Instead of crying or shrieking, Rosalie laughed outright.
At the sound of the laugh the woman drew back hastily.
“By gor!” she gasped; “the—she’s gone daffy!”
The men turned toward them with wonder in their faces. Bill was the first to comprehend. He saw the girl’s face grow sober with an effort, and realised that she was checking her amusement because it was sure to offend.
“Aw,” he grinned, “I don’t blame her fer laughin’! Say what ye will, Maude, your name don’t fit you.”
“It’s as good as any name—” began the old hag, glaring at him; but Sam interposed with a command to her to get them some hot coffee while he had a talk with the girl. “Set up!” he said roughly, addressing Rosalie. “We ain’t goin’ to hurt you.”
Rosalie struggled to a sitting posture, her limbs and back stiff from the cold and inaction. “Don’t ask questions, because they won’t be answered. I jest want to give you some advice as to how you must act while you are our guest. You must be like one of the family. Maybe we’ll be here a day, maybe a week, but it won’t be any longer than that.”
“Would you mind telling me where I am and what this all means? Why have you committed this outrage? What have I done—” she found voice to say. He held up his hand.
“You forget what I said about askin’ questions. There ain’t nothin’ to tell you, that’s all. You’re here and that’s enough.”
“Well, who is it that has the power to answer questions, sir? I have some right to ask them. You have—”
“That’ll do, now!” he growled. “I’ll put the gag back on you if you keep it up. So’s you won’t worry, I want to say this to you: Your friends don’t know where you are, and they couldn’t find you if they tried. You are to stay right here in this cave until we get orders to move you. When the time comes we’ll take you to wherever we’re ordered, and then we’re through with you. Somebody else will have the say. You won’t be hurt here unless you try to escape—it won’t do you any good to yell. It ain’t a palace, but it’s better than the grave. So be wise. All we got to do is to turn you over to the proper parties at the proper time. That’s all.”
“Is the person you speak of my—my mother or my father?” Rosalie asked with bated breath.
CHAPTER XIX
With the Kidnapers
Sam stared at her, and there was something like real amazement in his eyes.
“Yer mother or father?” he repeated interrogatively. “Wha—what the devil can they have to do with this affair? I guess they’re askin’ a lot of questions themselves about this time.”
“Mr. and Mrs. Crow are not my parents,” she said; and then shrewdly added, “and you know it, sir.”
“I’ve heard that sayin’ ’bout a child never knowin’ its own father, but this business of both the father and mother is a new one on me. I guess it’s the chloroform. Give us that booze, Bill. She’s dippy yet.”
He tried to induce her to swallow some of the whiskey, but steadfastly she refused, until finally, with an evil snarl, Sam commanded the giantess to hold her while he forced the burning liquor down her throat. There was a brief struggle, but Rosalie was no match for the huge woman, whose enormous arms encircled her; and as the liquid trickled in upon her tongue she heard above the brutal laughter of the would-be doctors the hoarse voice of Bill crying:
“Don’t hurt her, Sam! Let ’er alone!”
“Close yer face! Don’t you monkey in this thing, Bill Briggs. I’ll—well, you know. Drink this, damn you!”
Sputtering and choking, her heart beating wildly with fear and rage, Rosalie was thrown back upon the straw by the woman. Her throat was burning from the effects of the whiskey and her eyes were blinded by the tears of anger and helplessness.
“Don’t come any of your highfalutin’ airs with me, you little cat,” shrieked the old woman, rubbing a knee that Rosalie had kicked in her struggles.
“Lay still there,” added Sam. “We don’t want to hurt you, but you got to do as I tell you. Understand? Not a word, now! Gimme that coffee-pot, Davy. Go an’ see that everything’s locked up an’ we’ll turn in fer the night. Maude, you set up an’ keep watch. If she makes a crack, soak her one.”
“You bet I will. She’ll find she ain’t attendin’ no Sunday-school picnic.”
“No boozin’!” was Sam’s order as he told out small portions of whiskey. Then the gang ate ravenously of the bacon and beans and drank cup after cup of coffee. Later the men threw themselves upon the piles of straw and soon all were snoring. The big woman refilled the lantern and hung it on a peg in the wall of the cave; then she took up her post near the square door leading to the underground passage, her throne an upturned whiskey barrel, her back against the wall of the cave. She glared at Rosalie through the semi-darkness, frequently addressing her with the vilest invectives cautiously uttered—and all because her victim had beautiful eyes and was unable to close them in sleep.
Rosalie’s heart sank as she surveyed the surroundings with her mind once more clear and composed. After her recovery from the shock of contact with the old woman and Sam she shrank into a state of mental lassitude that foretold the despair which was to come later on. She did not sleep that night. Her brain was full of whirling thoughts of escape, speculations as to what was to become of her, miserable fears that the end would not be what the first impressions had made it, and, over all, a most intense horror of the old woman, who dozed, but guarded her as no dragon ever watched in the days of long ago.
The cave in which they were housed was thirty or forty feet from side to side, almost circular in shape, a low roof slanting to the rocky floor. Here and there were niches in the walls, and in the side opposite to the entrance to the passageway there was a small, black opening, leading without doubt to the outer world. The fact that it was not used at any time during her stay in the cave led her to believe it was not of practical use. Two o
r three coal-oil stoves were used to heat the cave and for cooking purposes. There were several lanterns, a number of implements (such as spades, axes, crowbars, sledges, and so forth), stool-kegs, a rough table, which was used for all purposes known to the dining-room, kitchen, scullery and even bedchamber. Sam slept on the table. Horse blankets were thrown about the floor in confusion. They served as bedclothes when the gang slept. At other times they might as well have been called doormats. One of the niches in the wall was used as the resting place for such bones or remnants as might strike it when hurled in that direction by the occupants. No one took the trouble to carefully bestow anything in the garbage hole, and no one pretended to clean up after the other. The place was foul smelling, hot and almost suffocating with the fumes from the stoves, for which there seemed no avenue of escape.
Hours afterward, although they seemed drawn out into years, the men began to breathe naturally, and a weird silence reigned in the cave. They were awake. The venerable Maude emerged from her doze, looked apprehensively at Sam, prodded the corner to see that the prize had not faded away, and then began ponderously to make preparations for a meal, supposedly breakfast. Meagre ablutions, such as they were, were performed in the “living room,” a bucket of water serving as a general wash-basin. No one had removed his clothing during the night, not even his shoes. It seemed to her that the gang was in an ever-ready condition to evacuate the place at a moment’s notice.
Rosalie would not eat, nor would she bathe her face in the water that had been used by the quartette before her. Bill Briggs, with some sense of delicacy in his nature, brought some fresh water from the far end of the passageway. For this act he was reviled by his companions.
“It’s no easy job to get water here, Briggs,” roared Sam. “We got to be savin’ with it.”
“Well, don’t let it hurt you,” retorted Bill. “I’ll carry it up from the river tonight. You won’t have to do it.”
“She ain’t any better’n I am,” snorted Maude, “and nobody goes out to bring me a private bath, I take notice. Get up here and eat something, you rat! Do you want us to force it down you—”
“If she don’t want to eat don’t coax her,” said Sam. “She’ll soon get over that. We was only hired to get her here and get her away again, and not to make her eat or even wash. That’s nothing to us.”
“Well, she’s got to eat or she’ll die, and you know, Sam Welch, that ain’t to be,” retorted the old woman.
“She’ll eat before she’ll die, Maudie; don’t worry.”
“I’ll never eat a mouthful!” cried Rosalie, a brave, stubborn light in her eyes. She was standing in the far corner drying her face with her handkerchief.
“Oho, you can talk again, eh? Hooray! Now we’ll hear the story of her life,” laughed big Sam, his mouth full of bacon and bread. Rosalie flushed and the tears welled to her eyes.
All day long she suffered taunts and gibes from the gang. She grew to fear Davy’s ugly leers more than the brutal words of the others. When he came near she shrank back against the wall; when he spoke she cringed; when he attempted to touch her person she screamed. It was this act that brought Sam’s wrath upon Davy’s head. He won something like gratitude from the girl by profanely commanding Davy to confine his love to looks and not to acts.
“She ain’t to be harmed,” was Sam’s edict. “That goes, too.”
“Aw, you go to—” began Davy belligerently.
“What’s that?” snarled Sam, whirling upon him with a glare. Davy slunk behind his mother and glared back. Bill moved over to Sam’s side. For a moment the air was heavy with signs of an affray. Rosalie crouched in her corner, her hand over her ears, her eyes closed. There was murder in Davy’s face. “I’ll break every bone in your body!” added Sam; but Bill laconically stayed him with a word.
“Rats!” It was brief, but it brought the irate Sam to his senses. Trouble was averted for the time being.
“Davy ain’t afraid of him,” cried that worthy’s mother shrilly.
“You bet I ain’t!” added Davy after a long string of oaths. Sam grinned viciously.
“There ain’t nothin’ to fight about, I guess,” he said, although he did not look it. “We’d be fools to scrap. Everything to lose and nothin’ to gain. All I got to say, Davy, is that you ain’t to touch that girl.”
“Who’s goin’ to touch her?” roared Davy, bristling bravely. “An’ you ain’t to touch her nuther,” he added.
The day wore away, although it was always night in the windowless cave, and again the trio of men slept, with Maude as guard. Exhausted and faint, Rosalie fell into a sound sleep. The next morning she ate sparingly of the bacon and bread and drank some steaming coffee, much to the derisive delight of the hag.
“You had to come to it, eh?” she croaked. “Had to feed that purty face, after all. I guess we’re all alike. We’re all flesh and blood, my lady.”
The old woman never openly offered personal violence to the girl. She stood in some fear of the leader—not physical fear, but the strange homage that a brute pays to its master. Secretly she took savage delight in treading on the girl’s toes or in pinching her arms and legs, twisting her hair, spilling hot coffee on her hands, cursing her softly and perpetrating all sorts of little indignities that could not be resented, for the simple reason that they could not be proved against her. Her word was as good as Rosalie’s.
Hourly the strain grew worse and worse. The girl became ill and feverish with fear, loathing and uncertainty. Her ears rang with the horrors of their lewdness, her eyes came to see but little, for she kept them closed for the very pain of what they were likely to witness. In her heart there grew a constant prayer for deliverance from their clutches. She was much too strong-minded and healthy to pray for death, but her mind fairly reeled with the thoughts of the vengeance she would exact.
The third day found the gang morose and ugly. The confinement was as irksome to them as it was to her. They fretted and worried, swore and growled. At nightfall of each day Sam ventured forth through the passage and out into the night. Each time he was gone for two or three hours, and each succeeding return to the vile cave threw the gang into deeper wrath. The word they were expecting was not forthcoming, the command from the real master was not given. They played cards all day, and at last began to drink more deeply than was wise. Two desperate fights occurred between Davy and Sam on the third day. Bill and the old woman pulled them apart after both had been battered savagely.
“She’s sick, Sam,” growled Bill, standing over the cowering, white-faced prisoner near the close of the fourth day. Sam had been away nearly all of the previous night, returning gloomily without news from headquarters. “She’ll die in this damn place and so will we if we don’t get out soon. Look at her! Why, she’s as white as a sheet. Let’s give her some fresh air, Sammy. It’s safe. Take her up in the cabin for a while. Tonight we can take her outside the place. Good Lord, Sammy, I’ve got a bit of heart! I can’t see her die in this hole. Look at her! Can’t you see she’s nearly done for?”
After considerable argument, pro and con, it was decided that it would be safe and certainly wise to let the girl breathe the fresh air once in a while. That morning Sam took her into the cabin through the passage. The half hour in the cold, fresh air revived her, strengthened her perceptibly. Her spirits took an upward bound. She began to ask questions, and for some reason he began to take notice of them. It may have been the irksomeness of the situation, his own longing to be away, his anger toward the person who had failed to keep the promise made before the abduction, that led him to talk quite freely.
CHAPTER XX
In the Cave
“It’s not my fault that we’re still here,” he growled in answer to her pathetic appeal. “I’ve heard you prayin’ for Daddy Crow to come and take you away. Well, it’s lucky for him that he don’t know where you are. We’d make mincemeat of that old jay in three minutes. Don’t do any more prayin’. Prayers are like dreams—you have ’em at nigh
t and wonder why the next day. Now, look ’ere, Miss Gray, we didn’t do this rotten job for the love of excitement. We’re just as anxious to get out of it as you are.”
“I only ask why I am held here and what is to become of me?” said Rosalie resignedly. She was standing across the table from where he sat smoking his great, black pipe. The other members of the gang were lounging about, surly and black-browed, chafing inwardly over the delay in getting away from the cave.
“I don’t know why you’ve been held here. I only know it’s damn slow. I’d chuck the job, if there wasn’t so much dust in it for me.”
“But what is to become of me? I cannot endure this much longer. It is killing me. Look! I am black and blue from pinches. The old woman never misses an opportunity to hurt me.”
“She’s jealous of you because you’re purty, that’s all. Women are all alike, hang ’em! I wouldn’t be in this sort of work if it hadn’t been for a jealous wife.”
He puffed at his pipe moodily for a long time, evidently turning some problem over and over in his mind. At last, heaving a deep sigh, and prefacing his remarks with an oath, he let light in upon the mystery. “I’ll put you next to the job. Can’t give any names; it wouldn’t be square. You see, it’s this way: you ain’t wanted in this country. I don’t know why, but you ain’t.”
“Not wanted in this country?” she cried blankly. “I don’t stand in any one’s way. My life and my love are for the peaceful home that you have taken me from. I don’t ask for anything else. Won’t you tell your employer as much for me? If I am released, I shall never interfere with the plans of—”
“’Tain’t that, I reckon. You must be mighty important to somebody, or all this trouble wouldn’t be gone through with. The funny part of it is that we ain’t to hurt you. You ain’t to be killed, you know. That’s the queer part of it, ain’t it?”
The George Barr McCutcheon Megapack: 25 Classic Novels and Stories Page 296