People's Pilot, Volume 3, Number 16, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 October 1893 — WARING'S [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
WARING'S
By PERIL.
Car! C»u»at KINQ. w.a.AMMYJ
[ Copyright, 1863. by J. B. Lippincott Co., and published by special arrangement.] VII. - CONTINUED. Quietly rising from his seat, the official who so recently had had the verbal tilt with Cram held forth a rusty, crosshilted, two-edged knife that looked as though it might have lain in the mud and wet for hours. “Have you ever seen this knife before?” he asked. And Doyle, lifting up his eyes one instant, groaned, shuddered, and said: “Oh, my God, yes!” “Whose property is it or was it?” At first he would not reply. He moaned and shook. At last: “Sure,the initials are on the top,” he cried. But the official was relentless. “Tell us what they are and what 'they represent.” People were crowding the hallway and forcing themselves into the room. 'Cram and Ferry, curiously watching their ill-starred comrade, had exchanged glances of dismay when the knife was so suddenly produced. Now they bent breathlessly forward. The silence for the moment was oppressive. “If it’s the knife I mane,” he sobbed at last, desperately, miserably, “the letters are S. B. W., and it belongs to .Lieut. Waring of our bathery.” But no questioning, however adroit, ■could elicit from him the faintest information as to how it got there. The last time he remembered seeing it, he said, was on Mr. Waring’s table the morning of the review. A detective testified to having found it among the bushes under the window as the water receded. Ferry and the miserable were called, and they, too, had -io identify the knife, and admit that -neither had seen it about the room .since Mr. Waring left for town. Of ■other witnesses called, came first the proprietor of the stable to which the cab belonged. Horse and cab, he said, covered with mud, were found under a shed two blocks below the French market, and the only thing in the cab was a handsome silk umbrella, London make, which Lieut. Pierce laid claim to. Mrs. Doyle swore that as she was going in search of her husband she .met the cab just below the Pelican, -.driving furiously away, and that in •the flash of lightning she recognized the driver as the man whom Lieut. "Waring had beaten that morning on the levee in front of her place. A stranger was seated beside him. There were two gentlemen inside, but she, saw the face of only one—Lieut. Waring. Nobody else could throw any light on the matter. The doctor, recalled, declared the knife or dagger was shaped exactly as would have to be the one -.that gave the death blow. Everything pointed to the fact that there had been a struggle, a deadly encounter, and that after the fatal work was done the murderer or murderers had left the - doors locked and barred and escaped through the window, leaving the desk rifled and carrying away what money there was, possibly to convey the idea -that it was only a vulgar murder and : robbery after all. Of other persons who might throw 1 light upoq the tragedy the following - were missing: Lieut. Waring, Private Dawson, the cabman, and the unrecognized stranger. So, too, was Anatole’s \boat. via When four days and nights had passed Away without a word or" sign from Waring, the garrison had come to the con--clusion that those officers or men of Battery “X” who stUl believed him innocent were idiots. So did the civil -authorities; butthose were days when tthe civil authorities of Louisiana comrmanded less respect from its educated -people than did even the military. ‘The police force, like the state, were ■undergoing a process called reconstruction, which might have been impressive in theory, but was ridiculous in practice. A reward had been offered by business associates -of the deceased for the capture and •conviction of the assassin. A distant relative of old Lascelles had come to take charge of the place until M. Philippe should arrive. 'Hie latter’s address had been found among ■ old Armand’s -papers, and dispatches, via Havana, 'had been sent to him, also letters. Pierre d’Hervilly had taken the weeping widow and little Nin Nin to bonne maman’s to stay. Alphonse and his woolly-pated mother, true to negro superstitions, had decamped. Nothing would induce them to remain under the roof where foul murder had been done. “De hahnts” was what they were afraid of. And so the old white homestead, though surrounded on every side
by curiosity seekers and prying eyes, was practically deserted. Cram went about his duties with a heavy heart and light aid. Ferry and Pierce both commanded section snow, as Doyle remained in close arrest and “Pills the Less” in close attendance. Something was utterly wrong with the fellow. Mrs. Doyle had not again ventured to show her red nose within the limits of the “barx,” as she called them, a hint from Braxton having proved sufficient; but that she was ever scouting the pickets no one could doubt. Morn, noon and night she prowled about the neighborhood, employing the “byes,” so she termed such stray sheep in army blue as a dhropof Anatole’s best would tempt, to carry scawling notes to Jim, one of which, falling with its postman by the wayside and turned over by the guard to Capt Cram for transmittal, was addressed to Mister Loot’nt James Doyle, Lite Bothery X, Jaxun Barx, and brought the only laughter to his lips the big horse artilleryman had known for nearly a week. Her customary Mercury, Dawson, had vanished from sight, dropped, with many another and often a better man, as a deserter. Over at Waring's abandoned quarters the shades were drawn and the green jalousies bolted. Pierce stole in each day to see that everything, even to the augmented heap of letters, was undisturbed, and Ananias drooped in the court below and refused to be comforted. Cram had duly notified Waring’s relatives, now living in New York, of his strange and sudden disappearance, but made no mention of the cloud of suspicion which had surrounded his name. Meantime, some legal friends of the family were overhauling the Lascelles papers, and a dark-complex-ioned, thick-set, active little civilian was making frequent trips between the department headquarters and barracks. At the former he compared notes with Lieut. Reynolds, and at the latter with Braxton and Cram! The last interview Mr. AHerton had before leaving with his family for the north was with this same lively party, the detective who joined them that night at the St. Charles, and Allerton, being a man of much substance, had tapped his pocketbook significantly. “The difficulty just now is in having a talk with the widow,” said this official to Cram and Reynolds, whom he had met by appointment on the Thursday following the eventful Saturday
of Braxton’s “combined” review. “She is too much prostrated. I’ve simply got to wait awhile, and meantime go about this other affair. Is there no way in which you can see her?” Cram relapsed into a brown study. Reynolds was poring over the note written to Braxton and comparing it with one he held in his hand —an old one, and one that told an old, old story. “I know you’ll say I have no right to ask this,” it read, “but you’re a gentleman and I’m a friendless woman deserted by a worthless husband. My own people are ruined by the war, but even if they had money they wouldn’t send any to me, for I offended them all by marrying a Yankee officer. God knows lam punished enough for that. But I was so young and innocent when he courted me. I ought to of left—l would of left him as soon as I found out how good-for-nothing he really was, only I was so mhch in love I couldn’t. I was fastenated, I suppose. Now I’ve sold everything, but if you’ll only lend me fifty dollars I’ll work my fingers to the bone until I pay it. For the old home’s sake, please do.” “It’s the same hand—the same woman, Cram, beyond a doubt. She bled Waring for the old home’s sake the first winter he was in the south. He told me all about it two years ago in Washington, when we heard of her |he second time, Now she’s followed him over here, or got here first, tried the same game probably, met with a refusal, and this anonymous note is her revenge. The man she married was a eback-brained weakling who got into the army the fag end of the war, fell in love with her pretty face, married her, then they quarreled and he drank himself into a muddle-head. She ran him into debt; then he gambled away government funds, bolted, was caught, tuid would have been tried and sent to jail, but some powerful relative saved him that, and simply had him dropped —never heard of him again. She was about a month grass-widowed when Waring came on his first duty there. He had an uncongenial lot of brother officers for a two-company post, and really had known of this girl and her people before the war, and she appealed to him, first for sympathy and help, then charity, then blackmail, I reckon, from which his fever saved him. Then she struck some quartermaster or other and lived off him for awhile; drifted over here, and no sooner did he arrive, all ignorant of her presence in or around New Orleans, than she began pestering him again. When he turned a deaf ear, she probably threatened, and then came these anonymous missives to you and Braxton. Yours always came by mail, you say. The odd thing about the colonel’s —this one, at least—is that it was with his mail, but never came through the post office.” “That’s all very interesting,” said the little civilian, diyly, “but what we
want is evidence to acquit him and convict somebody else of Lascelles' death. What has this to do with the other?” “This much: This letter came to Braxton by hand, not by mail —by hand, probably direct from her. What hand had access to the office the day when the whole command was out at review? Certainly no outsider. The mail is opened and distributed on its arrival at nine o’clock by the chief clerk, or by the sergeant major, if he happens to be there, though he’s generally at guard mount. On this occasion he was out at review. Leary, chief clerk, tells Col. Braxton he opened and distributed the mail, putting the colonel’s on his desk; Root was with him and helped. The third clerk came in later; had been out all night, drinking. His name is Dawson. Dawson goes out again and gets fuller, when next brought home is put in hospital under a sentry. Then he hears of the murder, bolts, and isn’t heard from since, except as the man who helped Mrs. Doyle to get her husband home. He is the fellow who brought that note. He knew something of its contents, for the murder terrified him, and h$ ran aw\ Find his trail, and yofi strike that of the woman who wrote these.” “By the Lord, lieutenant, if you’H quit the army and take my place you’ll make a namd and a fortune.”. “And if you’ll quit your place and take mine you’ll get your coup de grace in some picayune Indian fight and be forgotten. So stay where you are; but find Dawson, find her, find what they know, and you’ll be famous.” *• IX That night, or very early next morning, there was pandemonium at the barracks. It was clear, still, beautiful. A soft April wind was drifting up from the lower coast, laden with the perfume of sweet olive and orange blossoms. Mrs. Cram, with one or two lady /riends and a party of officers, had been chatting in low tone upon their gallery until after eleven, but elsewhere about the moonlit quadrangle all was silence when the second relief was posted. Far at the rear of the walled inclosure, where, in deference to the manners and customs of war as observed in the good old days whereof our seniors tell, the sutler’s establishment was planted within easy hailing distance of the guardhouse, there was still the sound of
modified revelry by night, and poker and whisky punch had gathered their devotees in the grimy parlors of Mr. Finkbein, and here the belated ones tarried until long after midnight, as most of them were bachelors and had no better halves, as had Doyle, to fetch them home “out of the wet.” Cram and his lieutenants, with the exception of Doyle, were never known to patronize this establishment, whatsoever they might do outside. They had separated before midnight, and little Pierce, after his customary peep into Waring’s preserves, had closed the door, gone to his own room to bed and to sleep. Ferry, as battery officer of the day, had made the rounds of the stables and gun shed about one o’clock, and had encountered Capt. Kinsey, of the infantry, coming in from his long tramp through the dew-wet field, returning from the inspection of the sen-try-post at the 'big magazine. “No news of poor Sam yet, I suppose?” said Kinsey, sadly, as the two came strolling in together through the rear gate. “Nothing whatever,” was Ferry’s answer. “We cannot even form a conjecture, unless he, too, has been murdered. Think of there being a warrant out for his arrest—for him, Sam Waring!” / “Well,” said Kinsey, “no other conclusion could be well arrived at, unless that poor brute Doyle did it in a drunken row. Pills says he never saw a man so terror-stricken as he seems to be. He’s afraid to leave him, really, and Doyle’s afraid to be alone—thinks the old woman may get in.” “She has no excuse for coming, captain,” said Ferry. “When she told Cram she must see her husband to-day, that she was out of money and starving, the captain surprised her by handing her fifty dollars, which is much more than she’d have got from Doyle. She took it, of course, but that isn’t what she wanted. She wants to get at him. She has money enough.” “Yes, that woman’s a terror, Ferry. Old Mrs. Murtagh, wife of my quartermaster sergeant, has been in the army twenty years, and says she knew her well—knew all her people. She comes from a tough lot, and they had a bad reputation in Texas in the old days. Doyle’s a totally different man since she turned up, Cram tells me. Hello! here’s ‘Pills the Less,’ ”he suddenly exclaimed, as they came opposite the west gate leading to the hospital. “How’s your patient, Doc?” “Well, he’s sleeping at last He seems worn out. It’s the first time I’ve left him; but I’m used up and want a few hours’ sleep. There isn’t anything to drink in the room, even if he should wake, and Jim is sleeping or lying there by him.” “Oh, he’ll do all right now, I reckon,” said the officer of the day, cheerfully. “Go and get your sleep. The old womian can’t get at him unless she bribes |
tny sentries or rides the air on a broomstick, like some other old witches I’ve read of. Ferry sleeps in the adjoining room,.anyhow, so he can look out for her. Good night, Doc." And so, on they went, glancing upward at the dim light just showing through tiie window-blinds in the gable end of Doyle's quarters, and halting at the foot of the stairs. “Come over and have a pipe with me, Ferry,” said the captain. “It’s too beautiful a night to turn in. I want to talk to you about Waring, anyhow. This thing weighs on my mind.” “Done with you, for an hour anyhow!” said Ferry. “Just wait a minute till I run up and get my baccy." Presently down came the young fellow again, meerschaum in hand, the moonlight glinting on his slender figure, so trim and jaunty in the battery dress. Kinsey looked him over with a smile of soldierly approval and a whimsteal comment on the contrast between the appearance of youny artillery sprig and that of his own stout perequality, clad as he was in a bulging blue flannel sack coat, only distinguishable in cut and style from civilian garb by its having brass buttons and a pjiir of tarnished old shoulder straps, ferry was a swell. His shell jacket ilttea like wiS. The Russian s'houldqr knots of twisted gold were of the hand* ’ somest make. The riding breeches, top boots and spurs were such that even Waring could not criticise. His saber gleamed in the moonbeams, and Kinsey’s old leather-covered sword looked dingy by contrast. His belt fitted trim and taut, and was polished as his boot-tops; Kinsey’s sank down over the left hip, and was worn brown. The sash Ferry sported as battery officer of the day was draped, West Point fashion, over the shoulder and around the waist, and accurately knotted and looped; Kinsey’s old war-worn crimson net was slung higgledy-piggledy over his broad chest. !»o bb ooxnxuxn.]
“HAVE YOU EVER SEEN THIS KNIFE BEFORE?”
