The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, September 29, 1870, Image 1
An Independent Family Journal?-Devoted to Politics, Literature and General Intelligence*
HOYT & CO., Proprietors.
ANDERSON C. H., S. C, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 29, 187?.
VOLUME 6?NO. 14.
ft Eine 1er Bail ?bt,
CHAPTER I.
; "It is not of the least use to argue the ques?
tion, father. Tell me plainly, yes or no, and
I will bother you no more about it"
"I cannot indulge you in this, Harry. In?
deed, you should believe me when I say we
caunot afford it."
_Mr. Houghton leaned his head heavily on
his hands as he spoke, and seemed to depre?
cate the displeasure of his handsome, impa?
tient son.
"Very well, sir," said the youth of nineteen,
his hands quivering as he rose with the anger
he seemed striving to keep out of his words
and tones. "I hope you will never be sorry
for the trifle you have refused me to-night. I
shall make the trip to Lake George next week,
nevertheless, if I have to sell my grandfather's
watch aud chain to get the money."
A half-groan came from the hidden face of
Foster Houghton, and a reproachful "0, Hat-1
ry I" from his mother, whose eyes had been
filling with tears as she sat silent through the
stormy interview. But the boy was angry,
and in earnest, and he twisted the chain in his
waistcoat to give emphasis to the threat. Then
as he took his cloak and cup from the closet he
continued:
"You need not sit up for me, or leave the
door unlocked ; I am going to Tinborough with
the- fellows of the strawberry party, and as
there will be a dance, and as the nights are
short. I shall wait for daylight to come home,
if I do not stop and catch a nap at the Valley
House, before starting."
"Who is going from Elmfield ?" inquired the
father, "more from a desire to show an interest
aud win the boy from his moodincss than any
real curiosity.
"Nearly everybody of my set," said Harn-,
with something" of a studied coldness: "Arthur
Brooks and Tom Boxham and Frank Petten
gill?and Harrison Frv, if you want the whole
list"
His father turned sharply away, but the
mother spoke appeal ingly:
"If you would cut oil* your intimacy with
Harrison Fry, now and forever, I think there
are very few things your father would refuse
you. 1 have seen his evil influence over you
ever since ho came back from the city. He
was a bad boy, and will be a bad man."
"Like myself and other wicked people,"
said the boy, looking at his watch, "Harry Fry
is not half so black as he is painted. But I
am not as intimate with him as you fancy ;
and as to father, I don't think his treatment of
mc to-night gives him a clue to interfere with
my friendships."
Henry Houghton shot his shaft deliberate?
ly, for he knew his father's sensitive nature,
in which it would rankle cruelly; and in a
moment he was off, bounding through the low,
open window, and running with fleet steps
down the gravel sidewalk toward the common.
The family circle thus divided was that of
the cashier of the Blue River National Bank,
of Elmfield. Foster Houghton was a man past
middle age, and older than his years in appear?
ance.and in heart. He had petted his only
son in his childhood enough to spoil most boys,
and now made the balance even by repressing
the exuberance of his youth with a sharpness
sometimes no more than just, sometimes queru?
lous and unreasonable. The boy's grandfather,
old Peleg Houghton, who died a year before at
ninety and over, had almost worshipped Har?
ry, and on his death-bed, had presented his
own superb Frodsham watch to the lad ; and
both father and mother knew he must be deep?
ly moved to speak so lightly at parting with it.
" "I fear Harry is getting in a very bad way,"
Baid Mr. Houghton, gloomily, after a pause in
which the sharper click of his wife's needles
told that her thoughts were busy. "He. goes
to the other church too often to begin with?
smokes, after I have repeatedly told him how
the habit hurt me in my boyhood, and what a
fight I had to break it off. He is altogether
too much in Harrison Fry's company. He has
been twice before to Tinborough, driving
home across the. country in the gray of the
morning. And this project of going alone to
Lake George on a week's trip is positively
ridiculous."
"Very likely you are the best judge, my
dear," said Mrs. Houghtpn. She always began
in that way when she meant to prove him oth?
erwise. "I fully agree with vou about that
reckless young Fry. But as to Harry's going to
the brown church, and his visits to Tinborough,
I think the same cause is at the bottom of both.
Grace Chamberlin has been singing in the
choir over there this Spring, and now she is
visiting her aunt at Tinborough. And as to
that, she is going with her aunt's family to
Lake George, to spend July, and I suppose
they have expressed a wish to meet him there.
Grace Chamberlin is a very pretty girl; and
Harry is like what you were at his age."
"Bless my soul, Mary," said the cashier,
"then, why didn't the boy tell me what he was
driving at? Chasing across the country after
a pretty face is foolish enough, at his age, but
it is not so bad as going to a watering-place
merely for the fashion of it, like some rich, old
nabob" or professional dandy. If Hurry had
told me he wanted to dangle after Grace Cham?
berlin, instead of talking in that desperate
way about the watch, I might have thought
differently. There is a charm on the chain
with my mother's hair, that I wouldn't have go
out of the family for a fortune."
Just then the door-bell rang, as if a power?
ful, nervous hand was at the knob. Mr.
Houghton answered the ring, for their one do?
mestic had been called away by a message from
a sick sister, and the mistress of the house was
"getting along alone" for a day. So when her
quick ear told her the visitor was one to see her
husband on business, she quitted the room to
set away the milk and lock up the rear doors of
the house for the night.
The caller was Mr. Silas Bixby. He would
have been a sharp man in Elmfield estimation
who could predict the object of one of Silas
Bixby's calls, though there were few doors in
the village at which his face was not frequent?
ly seen. He was the constable, but he was
also the superintendent of the Sunday School,
and the assessor of internal revenue in the dis?
trict, to say ilothing of his being the agent of
two or three sewing machine firms, and one
life insurance company, and tho correspondent
of the Tinborough Trumpet. Ho owned a farm
and managed it at odd hours. He gave some
of his Winter evenings to keeping a writing
Bc-bool, with which be sometimes profitably
combined a singing-school, with lucrative con?
certs at the end of the term. He was the clerk
of the fire company, and never had been ab?
sent from a fire, though some of his manifold
duties kept him riding through the neighbor?
ing towns in his light gig a great deal of the
time. He had raised a company and comman?
ded it, in the nine months' army of '62. JTc
kept a little bookstore in one corner of the vit
l?ge quadrangle, and managed a very small
circulating library, with the aid of the oldest
of his ten children ; and he was an equal part?
ner in the new factory enterprise at the Falls.
So Mr. Houghton did not venture to guess on
what errand Mr. Bixby came to see him, and
showed him to a chair in the twilighted sittiDg
room, with a face composed to decline a request
to discount a note, or to join with interest in a
conversation on the Sunday School, or to listen
to a report of the new fire engine fund, with
equal ease and alacrity.
Mr. Bixby looked about him to see that no?
body was in hearing. "You'll excuse me, I
know, 'squire, if I shut down the windows, hot
as it is;" and before his host could rise to an?
ticipate him, he had suited the action to the
word. "It's detective business. It's a big
thing. Do you know I told you, Mr. Hough?
ton, the first of the week, that there was dan?
gerous characters about town, and asked you
to keep your eyes open at the bank. Will
you bear witness of that?"
"I remember it very well, Mr. Bixby, and
also that there has not been a single person in
the bank since that day, other than our own
towns-people and friends."
"That is just it," said Silas Bixby, twisting
his whiskers reflectively ; "they have got some
accomplice who knows the neighborhood, and
whom we don't suspect. But we shall catch
him with the rest. The fact is, Mr. Houghton,
the Blue River National Bank is to be robbed
to-night. The plot is laid, aud I have got eve?
ry thread of it in my hand."
Foster Houghton was one of a class in the
village who were habitually incredulous as to
Silas Bixby's achievements, as announced by
himself; but there was a positiveness and as?
surance about the constable's manner which
carried conviction with it, and he did not con?
ceal the shock which the news gave him.
"Just you keep very cool, sir, and I'll tell
you the whole story in a very few words, for I
have got one or two things to do before I catch
the burglars, and I have promised to look into
Parson Petteugill's barn and doctor his sick
horse. There are two men in the job, besides
somebody in the village here that is working
with them secretly. You needu't ask me how
I managed to overhear their plans, for I shan't
tell; you will read it all in the Tinborough
Trumpet day after to-morrow. They are regu?
lar New York cracksmen, and they have been
stopping at the hotel at the Falls, pretending
to be looking at the water-power. They came
here on purpose to clean out the Blue River
Bank."
"Do they mean to blew open the safe ?" in?
quired Mr. Houghton, who was pacing the
room.
"Just have patience, 'Squire," said Silas
Bixby. "I thought it best to prepare you, and
so lead you up kind o' gradual. They have
got false keys to your house door and your bed?
room. They are going to come in at midnight
or an hour after, and gag you and your wife,
and force you, at the mouth of the revolver, to
the bank and open the combination lock.
Your help, they say, has gone off; and they
seem not to be afraid of Henry."*
"Henry gone to Tinborough," said Mr.
Houghton, mechanically.
"I presume they know that too, then," said
the constable. "They calculate on forty thou?
sand dollars in the safe, government bonds and
all. Their team* is to be ready on the Tinbor?
ough road, and they mean to catch the owl
train. You they calculate to leave, tied hand
and foot, on the bank floor, till you are found
there in the morning."
Foster Houghton stopped in his rapid walk
up and down the little room, and took his boots
from the closet.
"Fair play, 'Squire," said Bixby, laying a
hand on the cashier's arm as he sat down and
kicked off his slippers. "I've told you the
whole story, when 1 might have carried out my
plan without telling a word. Now what are
you going to do ?"
"Going to order a stout bolt put on my front
door at once, and to deposit the bank keys in
the safe at Fclton's store."
"You will think better of it if you will just
sit still and hear me through," replied the visi?
tor. "Don't you sec that will show your hand
to the gang, who are on the watch, and they
will just leave Elmfield and rob some other
bank and make their fortunes ? Moreover, the
plot never would be believed in the village,
and such a way of meeting it would make no
sensation at all in print. No, Mr. Houghton,*
you are cashier of the bank, and it is yeur bus
| iness to protect the property. I am constable
at Elmfield, and it is my duty to capture the
I burglars. I propose to do it in such a way that
the whole State shall ring with my brilliant
management of the matter, and yours, too, of
j course, so far as your part goes. The pro
; gramme is all complete, and you have only to
I fall in."
I "Well, Mr. Bixby," said the elder gentleman,
again surrendering to his companion's superior
I force and determination of character, "and
what is the programme ?"
"As far as you are concerned, simply to re?
main passive," said the rural constable. "You
are to show no knowledge of expecting the
visit, and after a proper display of reluctance
you are to go with the burglars, with your keys
in your hand. If I were to arrest the rascals
now, I should have nothing to charge them
with, and could only frighten them out of town.
When the bank is entered the crime is com?
plete. I shall be on the watch with two strong
fellows I have secured to help me?men who
served in my company, stout, afraid of nothing,
and not smart enough to claim the whole crea- i
it when the job is done. When you are fairly
inside the bank we shall pop out from behind
the bowling alley, guard the door, flash our
lanterns in their faces, and overpower them at
once. It sounds very short now, but it will ea?
sily fill a column in "the city papers."
"Mr. Bixby," said Foster Houghton, with a
good deal of deliberate emphasis, "I have al?
ways thought you a man of sense. I think so
now. Do you suppose I am going to stand
quietly by and sec a couple of ruffians tic a gag
in the mouth of my wife, when I know and
can prevent it before hand ?"
"No, sir, I expect no such thing," said Bix?
by, not a little embarrassed. "I expected like
as not you would bring up some such objection,
so I have provided for it in advance. John
Fletcher's little girl is very sick; they have
gone the rounds of all the folks on our street,
taking turns watching there ; to-night they
came to me and said, 'Bixby, can't you find us
somebody to watch ;' and I said I knew iust
the one that would be glad to help a neighbor.
So I will deliver the message to Mrs. Hough?
ton, and you needn't have a mite of anxiety
about her, up there as safe and comfortable as
if she were twenty miles away."
While her husband yet hesitated, Mrs. Hough?
ton re-entered the room ; and Bixbv, quick to
secure an advantage, was ready at the moment
with his petition.
"Good evening, Mrs. Houghton. Been wait?
ing very patient lor you to come in. I called
to see if you felt able and willing to set up to?
night along with John Fletcher's little girl.
The child don't get any better, and Mrs.
Fletcher, she is just about sick abed herself,
with care and worry."
"You know I am always ready to help a
neighbor in such trouble," said the lady, gra?
ciously, with the prompt acquiescence which
people in the country give to such calls. "And
now I think of it, Mr. Bixby, I have another
call to make on your street. I think I will
walk up with you, and so get around to Fletch?
er's at nine o'clock. My husband has several
letters to write, so he will not miss me."
Foster Houghton sat in a sort of maze, while
fate thus arranged affairs for him, though they
tended to a consummation which was far from
welcome to his mind. His wife went out for
her smelling salts, her spectacles and her heavy
shawl; and Bixby snatched the brief opportu?
nity.
"I have told you everything, 'Squire, that you
need to know. Keep your mind easy and your
head cool, and the whole thing may be done as
easy as turning your hand over. Remember
that it is the only way to save the bank and
catch the men that may have robbed a dozen
banks. Do not stir out of the house again this
evening, or you will excite suspicion and ruin
the game. Between twelve and two you may
expect your company; and rely upon me in
hiding close to the bank. Mum is the word
For Mrs. Houghton was descending the stairs.
"Come in again when you come back, Bix?
by ; can't you ?" said the cashier, still loth to
close so hasty and so singular a bargain.
"Not for the world," replied the constable.
"It would expose our hand at once, and spoil
the trick. l*ow, Mrs. Houghton, I'm really
Eroud to bo the beau to such a sprightly young
eile."
And so, with a word of farewell, they were
off, and Foster Houghton sat alone in the house
with his secret.
He was not a coward, but a man of peace by
temperament and training, and the enterprise
in which he had been enlisted was both foreign
and distasteful to him. How many incidents
might occur, not set down in Bixby's pro?
gramme, to make the night's work both dan?
gerous and disagreeable 1 His very loneliness
made the prospect 6eem doubly unpleasant. A
dozen times, as he sat musing over it, he put
forth his hand for his boots with intent to go
out and frustrate the robbery in his own way,
regardless of Bixby's schemes for capture and
glory. As many times he fell back in his easy
chair, thinking now that he was bound in honor
by bis tacit agreement with the constable, and
again that the whole story was nothing but the
fruit of the officer's fertile imagination, and
that only the inventor should render himself
ridiculous by his credultity. Now he wished
his wife was at home to make the waiting mo?
ments pass more quickly ; that Harry was there
to give the aid of his daring and the stimulus
of his boyish enthusiasm in the strange emer?
gency. And sometimes the old man's thoughts
wandered, in spite of the excitement of the
hour, to bis boy, dancing away the night at
Tinborough. lie recalled his anxiety over his
son's dissipation, his associate-, his growing
recklessness of manner, his extravagant tastes,
the look of hard defiance in his face but an
hour or two before. His heart yearned over
the lad in spite of his wild ways, like David's
over Absalom, and he resolved to try the
mother's method and imagine excuses, and re?
place harshness with indulgence, hereafter.
The village bell clanged out from the steeple
close by, and Foster Houghton dropped the
thread of his reverie with a start, and went
back to the robbery again. Clearly he was
getting too nervous. He must do something to
shake it off.
"I'll get Harry's revolver," he thought, with
little purpose what he should do with it; and
he took the lamp and went up stairs to the
boy's empty room. The drawers were thrown
open in a confusion which offended the cashier's
neat prejudices acquired in the profession. He
knew where the pistol was kept, but its box
was empty; and he exclaimed under his
breath?
"That is a boy all over. He goes to Tinbor?
ough to dance and eat strawberries, and he
carries a pistol, loaded, I dare say to the muz?
zle. It is ten to one he will shoot himself or
his sweetheart before the evening is over."
As Mr. Houghton fumbled over tho bureau
his hand encountered a covered flask. Even
his unaccustomed nose was able to recognize its
contents as whiskey ; and his regret at such a
discovery in his son's room was lost in the joy
with which he hailed a stimulant so greatly
needed to put his nerves in a conditiou for the
events to come. Perhaps he forgot how long
it was since he called in such a reinforce?
ment ; perhaps his hands shook; perhaps he
thought the occasion required a large dose. He
took a hearty one; and when he was down
stairs again the difficulties in the way of bag?
ging the burglars vanished from his mind. He
was a young man once more, and entered into
the romance of Bixby's plot, he said to him?
self, as enthusiastically as Harry would have
done. He paced the room with an clastic
stride very different from the nervous wavering
step with which he had heard the news. Bixby
ana himself, he thought, would be enough to
overpower any three ourglars. Then his head
was heavy, and he felt drowsy. To be in prop
Eer condition for the emergency, he reflected,
e needed all the sleep he could get. The re?
solve was one to be executed as promptly as
formed; and in a few minutes later the cashier
had locked the door, fastened the lower win?
dows, and was snugly in bed.
A gentle tinkle of the door bell aroused him
again before, as it seemed to him, he had fairly
closed his eyes. "The robbers at last," he
thought; and then he rebuked himself for the
absurdity of supposing that a burglar would
! announce his coming by the door-bell. "It is
Bixbv, of course," he said to himself, "come to
own he was a fool and the story all nonsense."
But he paused before he turned the key, and
said in his fiercest tone, "Who is there ?"
"It is only me, Foster," said the sweet, fa?
miliar voice of his wife, without; and when he
had admitted her she told him, in her quick
way, that after she had watched with the child
an hour or two, a professional nurse who had
been sent for a week before had arrived unex?
pectedly, and that she had been glad to give up
her vigil and come home.
Foster Houghton rarely did anything with?
out thinking twice about it, if not more; bo it
came about that while he balanced in his mind
the pros and cons as to revealing to his wife the
secret which Bixby had confided to him, and
thus give her a fright in advance for what
might prove to be a false alarm after all, the
tired lady went sound to sleep; and thus the
scale was turned in favor of reticence. Per?
haps the husband's continued drowsiness con?
tributed to the resolve also; for his eyelids still
drooped with strange obstinacy and an influ?
ence more powerful than even the apprehension
of danger transformed his terrors into dreams
again.
CHAPTER II.
One, two. rang out from the belfry on the
breathless June night, already heavy with the
rising fog from the river. Foster Houghton
found himself broad awake as he counted the
strokes ; but even while he thought it was the
clock that had disturbed him, he felt a cold,
hard ring of steel against his temple, and saw
through the darkness a man by his bedside.
"Not one word, or you will never utter an?
other." 1
He noticed the voice, even in the whirl of
the moment, and knew that it was strange to
him. He turned toward his wife, and saw that
there was a man by her side also, with revolver
aimed; felt, rather than saw, that she had
waked when he did, and was waiting, self
possessed, for whatever was to come. As the
darkness yielded to his eyes, he was aware of
the third figure, standing at the window.
"Perfect quiet, remember, and we will tell
you what is to be done," said the same voice,
cool, with an utterance entirely distinct yet
hardly louder than a whisper. "You have
nothing 10 fear if you obey ordere. A knife is
ready for the heart of each of you if you dis?
obey. The lady has simply to lie still"; as she
will be bound to the bed and her mouth stopp?
ed, that will be easy ; and the gag is very gentle,
and will not hurt if she does not resist. Mr.
Houghton will rise, put ou his trousers, and go
with us to the bank, always in range of this
pistol and in reach of this blade. The keys
are already in my pocket. Number Three, will
you scratch a match that I may help the gen?
tleman to his clothes." '
The figure in the window stepped noiselessly
forward at the summons. As the blue flame
lighted the room Foster Houghton observed
that his visitors were all masked, with black
silk, through which a narrow slit permitted
vision. He noticed that their fect were shod
with listing, so thick that a step made no audi?
ble sound on the straw carpet. He noticed that
long, thin black cloaks covered their forms to
the ankles, so that no details of clothing could
be noted to identify them. And while ne ob?
served these things, not venturing to stir until
the threatening muzzle was withdrawn from his
face, he felt his hand tightly clutched by the
fingers of his wife, beneath the coverlid.
Years of familiar association had made him
apt at interpreting his wife's thoughts and feel?
ings, without the aid of the spoken word.
Either by some peculiar expression in the grasp
itself, or by that subtle magnetism which we
know exists among the unknown forces, he felt
that there was something more than the natu?
ral terror of the moment, more than the cour?
age of a heart ever braver than his own, more
than sympathy for his own supposed dismay, in
his wife's snatch at his hand. More alarmed,
at the instant, by the shock thus given than
by the more palpable danger he turned his head
toward his wife again, and in her eyes and in
the direction they gave to his, saw all that she
had seen.
The masked figure in the centre of the room,
in producing a match, had unwittingly thrown
back one side of its cloak. By the sickly flame
just turning to white, Foster Houghton saw,
thus revealed, the twisted chain he had played
with in hib own boyhood, the golden crescent
with his mother's hair, the massive key with its
seal, just as he had seen them on his boy's
breast at sunset. In an instant more a taper
was lighted ; the curtain of the cloak was drawn
together again. But the secret it had exposed
was impressed upon two hearts, as if they had
been seared with iron. As a drowning man
thinks of the crowded events of a lifetime, Fos?
ter Houghton in that moment of supreme agony,
of a dozen links of circumstantial evidence?
the boy's baflled desire for money, his angry
words, his evil associates, his missing revolver,
his deliberate explanation of a night-long ab?
sence, his intimate knowledge of the affairs of
the bank, except the secret combination of the
lock, which he had often teased for in vain.
Two things were stamped upon his brain to?
gether and he was thankful that his wife could
know the horror of but one of them.
His own son was engaged in a plot to rob the
bank, by threats of assassination against those
who gave him birth. He himself was irrevo?
cably enlisted in a plot to capture the robbers,
and so to bring his boy to infamy and a pun?
ishment worse than death.
The discovery compels a pause in the narra?
tive. It made none in the actual progress of
events. The man who had spoken motioned
the cashier to rise, and assisted his trembling
hands in covering his limbs with one or two ar?
ticles of clothing. The one on the opposite
side of the bed moved quickly and deftly as a
sailor, bound Mrs. Houghton where she lay,
without a touch of rudeness or indignity be?
yond what his task made necessary. A knot?
ted handkerchief from his pocket was tied over
her mouth. The third figure stood at the win?
dow, either to keep a watch without or to avoid
seeing what took place within; but Foster
Houghton's eyes could discern no tremor, no
sign of remorse or hesitation, iti his bearing.
"Now, Cashier," said the one voice, which
alone had been heard since the stroke of the
clock, "you will have to consider yourself
ready, for we have no time to spare. I feel sure
you "know what is healthy for you, but still I
will tie this rope round your waist to save yon
from any dangerous temptation to try a side
street. Number Two, you will go below and
see if the coast is clear."
With one more look at his wife's eyes, in
which he saw outraged motherly affection,
where the strangers saw only fright and pain,
Foster Houghton suffered himself to be led
from the room. One of the robbers had pre?
ceded him ; one held him tightly by the wrist;
one, the one whose presence gave the scene its
treble terror, remained long enough to extin?
guish the taper and lock the door. The outer
door was fastened behind them also; and then
the noiseless- little procession (for the cashier
had been permitted to put on his stockings
only) filed along the gravel walk through the
pitch blackness which a mist gives to a moon?
less night, toward the solitary briek building
occupied by the Blue River National Bank.
They passed the school house where Foster
Houghton had carried his boy a dozen years
before, with a bright new primer clutched in
frightened little fingers ; then the desolate old
mansion of his own father, where the boy had
been petted and worshipped as fervently as at
home; a little further on, the church, where
the boy had been baptized, and where the
youth chafed beneath distasteful sermons?its
white steeple lost in the upper darkness; and,
a few paces beyond, the academy, within whose
walls the cashier had listened with such pride
to Harry's clonueut declamation of "The Re?
turn of Regulus to Carthage," on the last
Commencement day. He thought of these
things as he passed, though so many other
thoughts surged in his mind; and he wondered
if another heart beside his own was beset with
such reminiscences on the silent journey.
Before they reached the hank tho man who
had gone in advance rejoined them.
"It is all serene," he said in a low tone, but
with a coarser voice and utterance than his
confederate's; "nothing more than a cat stir?
ring. I have unhitched the mare, and we shall
be off in fifteen minutes."
"All right, Number Two," said the leader.
"The swag will be in the buggy in less time.
Cashier, you are a man of prudence, I know.
If you will work that combination skilfully
and promptly, not a bair of your bead shall be
harmed. If you make a blunder that costs us
a minute, not only will this knife be at home
in your heart, but we shall stop on our way
back and set your cottage on fire. Our retreat
will be covered, and you know the consequences
there, before the alarm will rouse anybody. I
have sworn to do it."
Foster Houghton fancied he saw a shudder
in the slighter figure beside him ; but it might
have been a puff of wind across the long dra?
pery.
"O, blow the threats," said Number Two.
"The man values his life, and he is going to
open the safe quicker than he ever did before.
Open the door, young one, and lets be about
it." The robber who had not yet opened his
lips, and whose whole motion the cashier still
watched stealthily, stepped forward to the
bank door; and as he drew a key from under
his cloak the prisoner caught another glimpse
of the chain he could have sworn to among a
thousand.
The door swung open. The cashier's heart
was in his tnroat. He had not heard a sound
of Bixby, but he knew the village constable
too well to fear, or hope, that he might have
given up the chase. All four entered the
building; but before the door could be closed
behind them there was a shout, a cry of dis?
may, a rush of heavy feet, a flash of light in a
lantern which gleamed but a moment before it
was extinguished, the confused sound of blows
and oaths, and the breaking of glass, punctua?
ted by the report of a pistol. Foster Houghton
could never give a clear account of the terrible
minute in which his consciousness seemed
partly benumbed. He took no part in the strug?
gle, but seemed to be pushed outside the door;
and there as the tumult within began to dimin?
ish, Silas Bixby came hurriedly to him, drag?
ging a masked figure by the shoulder.
"Houghton, you must help a little. We have
got the better of 'em, and my men are holding
the two big fellows down. But the fight is not
out of them yet, and you must hold this little
one three minutes, while I help to tie their
hands. Just hold this pistol to his head, and
he will rest very easy."
Even while he spoke Bixby was inside the
door again, and the gleam of light which fol?
lowed showed that he had recovered his lan?
tern and meant to do his work thoroughly.
Foster Houghton's left hand had been guided
to the collar of his captive, and the revolver
had been thrust in his right. There was no
question of the composure of the robber now.
He panted and sobbed and shook, and made no
effort to tear himself from the feeble grasp that
confined him.
If the cashier had been irresolute all his
life, he did not waver for an instant now. He
did not query within himself what was his
duty, or what was prudent, or what his wife
would advise, or what the bank directors would
think.
"Harry," he whispered, hoarsely, his lips
close to the mask, "I know you."
The shrinking figure gave one great sob.
Foster Houghton. went right on without paus?
ing.
"Bixby does not know you, and there is time
to escape, yet. I shall fire this pistol in the air.
Run for your life to your horse there, and push
on to Tinborough. You can catch the train.
May God forgive you."
The figure caught the hand which had re?
leased its hold as the words were spoken, and
kissed it. Then, turning back as if upon a
sudden impulse, the robber murmured some?
thing which could not be understood, and
thrust into the cashier's hand a mass of chilly
metal which his intuition rather than his
touch recognized as Peleg Houghton's watch
and chain. He had presence of mind enough
to conceal it in his pocket, and then he fired
his pistol, and he heard the sound of flying
feet and rattling wheels as Silas Bixby accosted
him.
"What in thunder! did he wriggle away from
you ? why didn't you sing out sooner?"
"I think I am getting faint. In Heaven's
name, go quick to my house and release my
wife and tell her all is safe. The fright of these
shots will kill her."
Foster Houghton sunk into a swoon, even as
he spoke, and only the quick arm of Silas Bixby
saved him from a fall cn the stone steps.
"See here, boys," said he, "if you have got
those fellows tied up tight, one of you take
'Squire Houghton ana bring him to, and I'll go
over to his house and untie his wife, before I
start after the pesky little rascal that has got
away. If I had 'a' supposed he would dare to
risk tho pistol I should have hung on to him
myself. Mike, you just keep your revolver
cocked, and if either of those men more than
winks, shoot him where he lies."
Having thus disposed of his forces, and pro?
vided for the guard of the prisoners and the
restoration of the disablea, the commander
was off at a run. Half of Emfield seemed to
have been awakened by the shots and he was
met by a half-dozen lightly clad men and boys
whom he sent on this errand and that, to open
the lock-up under the engine house, to harness
horses for the pursuit, vouchsafing only very
curt replies to their eager questions as to what
had happened. He was exasperatcSon arriving
at Foster Houghton's dwelling to find the door
locked and the windows fastened. So he raised
a stentorian shout of, "It's?-all?right?Mrs.?
Houghton. Robbers?caught?and?nobody
?hurt"; repeating his words carefully to insure
being understood ; and then scud at full speed
back toward the bank again. He met half-way
an excited, talkative little group, the central
figure of which was the cashier of the bank,
restored to life, but still white as death, and sup?
ported by friendly hands. Assured that Hough?
ton was now able" to release his wife, Bixby ran
on to the green, and in five minutes more was
settled in Iiis gig, and ureing his cheerful little
bay Morgan over the road to Tinborough, men?
tally putting into form his narrative for the
Trumpet as he went.
CHAPTER III.
Thus it came about that it was Foster Hough?
ton himself that unloosed his wife's bonds,?
bending his gray head as he did so, to print a
kiss of sorrow and sympathy on her wrinkled
check, and leaving a tear there.
"lie has escaped," he said, "and is on the road
to the station."
"Will he not be overtaken ?"
"I think not. He has a fair start, and knows
what is at stake; and the train passes through
before daylight."
Then the woman's heart, which had borne
her bravelv up so far, gave way, and she broke
into terrible sobs ; and the husband who would
comfort her was himself overcome by the com?
mon grief, and could not speak a word. Silent?
ly they suffered together, pressing hands, until
the entering light of dawn reminded them that
even this day had duties, and perhaps new
phases of sorrow. They could hear the quick
steps of persons evidently full of excitement
over the event of the night, and talking all
together. They could not be left long undis?
turbed. As they dressed, Foster Houghton?
unable or reluctant to describe in any detail the
scene at the bank, as his wife was to ask him
about it?suddenly encountered iu his pocket
the watch entangled in its chain.
"He gave me this, and a kiss," he said, every
word a sob ; and Mary Houghton pressed it to
her heart. Then, as a quick step sounded on
the porch, she hastily thrust it into a drawer.
"What shall wc say V she asked.
"I do not know. * Heaven will direct us for
the best," he replied.
The step did not pause for ceremony, but
came in and up the stairs as if on some press
1 ing errand.' Then the door opened, and Harry
Houghton ran in?his curls wet with the fog of
the morning, hia cheeks rosy as from a rapid
ride, his eyes dancing with excitement.
His father and mother stood speechless and
bewildered, filled with a new alarm. But the
boy was too busy with his own thoughts to ob
serve hia reception*, Thick Und fast Came ills'
words, questious waiting for no answers, and
narrative never pausing for comment.
"What is this Bixby shouted to me when I
met him, about robbers ? And what is there
such a crowd at the batik about 1 Did I come
sooner than you expected me ? We had a glo?
rious time at Tinborough, you know, and when
we were through dancing I decided to drive
home at once. And a few miles out I met
Silas in his gig, driving like mad, and he shout?
ed at me till I was out of hearing, but I could
not catch one Word in a dozen. But before
anything else, I want to beg your pardon for
my roughness last night. I am old enough to
know better, but I was angry when I spoke :
and I have been thoroughly ashamed of myself
ever since. You will forgive and forget, father,
won't you ? Hallo, I didn't suppose you felt so
badly about it, mother darlings
Mary Houghton was clasping her son's neck,
crying as she had not cried that night. But
the cashier, slower in seeing his way, as usual,
stood, passing his hand across his brows for a
moment. Then he spoke?
"Harry, where is your grandfather's watch?"
"There, did you miss it so quickly? I meant
to get it back before you discovered it was gone.
I will have it after breakfast. The fact is, I
was not myself when I left the house last night,
with temper, and Harrison Fry offered me two
hundred dollars for it, to be paid next week,
and in my temper I let him have it to bind the
bargain. I was crazy for money, and I sold
him my pistol, too. I regretted about the
watch before I had fairly quit the village; but
he broke his engagement and did not go with
us to Tinborough after all, so I have not had a
chance to get it back again till now,"
"Harrison Fry!" exclaimed Foster Hough?
ton ; and his hands clasped and his lips moved
in thankful prayer.
"But if you don't tell me what is all this ex?
citement in the village, I shall run out and find
out for myself," cried the boy impatiently,
"You never would stand here asking me ques?
tions about trifles, if the bank had been broken
open in the night."
Foster Houghton put his hands on his boy's
shoulders and kissed him, as he had not done
since his son's childhood. Then he took from
its hiding-place the watch" and hung it on Har?
ry's neck, his manifest emotion checking the
expression of the lad's astonishment,
"There is much to tell you, Harry," he said,
"and perhaps you will "think I have to ask
your forgiveness rather than you mine. Bat
your heart is too full for a word till after
prayers. Let's go down."
Then the three went down the stairs, the
mother clinging to the boy's hand, Which she
had never relinquished since her first embrace.
Foster Houghton took the massive Bible, as
was his daily custom, and read the chapter apon
which rested the mark left the morning before;
but his, voice choked and his eyes filled again
when he came to the lines:
"For this my son was dead and is alive again ;
he was lost and is found."
Silas Bixby galloped into Tinborough two
minutes late for the down train ; and the fugi?
tive was too sharp to be caught by the detec?
tives who were put on the watch for him by
telegraphic messages. In a few hours all Elm?
field had discovered that Harrison Frv was
missing, and had made up its mind that he was
the escaped confederate in the burglary. The
Blue River National Bank offered a reward for
him, but he has never been found. The zealous
constable found compensation for the loss of
one prisoner in the discovery that the other
two were a couple of the most skillful and
slippery of the metropolitan cracksmen, known
among other aliases as Gentlemen Graves and
Toffey. Bixby's courage and discretion re?
ceived due tribute from counsel, press and pub?
lic during the trial the next month in the Tin?
borough court house; and by some influence it
was so managed that Mrs. Houghton was not
called to the stand, nor was Foster Houghton
closely questioned in regard to the manner in
which the third robber had escaped from his
custody on the steps of the bank.
Harry Houghton went to Lake George that
Summer, startiug a day after the departure of
Grace Chamberlin; but this year they go to
?ether, and the programme of the tour includes
Hagara and Quebec.
Dried up the Wrong Max.?The follow?
ing is related of one of the brethren of a
church not a thousand miles from this city, as
having occurred a year or two since, but for ob?
vious reasons not let out of the select circles,
where it has always been a great source of fun.
A gentleman who is much gifted in exhorta?
tion, and likes to talk at Sunday School, at?
tended an evening meeting. While the bell
was ringing to hasten up the laggards, B. "im?
proved his opportunity by addressing an elo?
quent exhortation. Thinking the bell had been
rung long enough, another member said very
imperiously to one of those small boys who are
always arouud in season and out of season, "go
and "tell that fellow to stop." A small boy
never did understand anything as ho was told
to do it, and this particular small boy was not
likely to stultify himself in that manner. In?
stead of going to the sexton and silencing
"that dreadful Dell," he threaded his way down
the aisle, where B. was warming to his work,
and in a loud hissing voice said, "Here, now,
Mr.-says for you to dry up that." Poor
B. blushed a brilliant scarlet, cut off an earnest
invocation in the middle of a sentence and all
the balance of the evening sulked in solemn
silence. At the close of the meeting he de?
manded of the offending member an explana?
tion, which was satisfactorily given and tho
"unpleasantness" amicably settled.
A Southern Samson.?There is a man liv?
ing in Cnlhoun county, Miss., who is supposed
to oe the strongest m?n in the State, if not in
the entire South. He is thirty-five years of
age, and weighs two hundred and twenty-five
pounds. He has been known to carry three
bars of railroad iron, when -it takes from three
to five ordinary men to carry one. He can
take a cask containing forty gallons of whiskey
or water (the former is preferred, we-presume)
and raise it from the ground ana drink out of
the bung hole with as much ease as others could
out of a common pitcher; and he has frequent?
ly taken a barrel of flour under each arm, and.
balancing a sack of salt on his head, carried
them for several hundred yards with apparent?
ly but little effort. He offers to bet that he can
lift 1,300 pounds.
? "Here's a man fallen into this slough!"
exclaimed one laborer to another ; "harry, i;-r
he is up to his ankles," "If that's all, there's
no hurry." "Yes there is, for he's fallen in
head first 1"
? "Lcnnv," said his maiden aunt, "you
should eat the barley that is in your soup, or
you'll never get a man." Lenny, looking up
innocently, inquired : "Is that what you eat it
for, nnnry?