PAGE 14
The Exiles
by
The two men turned reluctantly away, and continued on down the stairs without speaking and with their faces filled with doubt. Holcombe ran first to Reese’s room and replaced the pistol in its holder. He was trembling as he threw the thing from him, and had barely reached his own room and closed the door when a sudden faintness overcame him. The weight he had laid on his nerves was gone and the laughter had departed from his face. He stood looking back at what he had escaped as a man reprieved at the steps of the gallows turns his head to glance at the rope he has cheated. Holcombe tossed the bundle of notes, upon the table and took an unsteady step across the room. Then he turned suddenly and threw himself upon his knees and buried his face in the pillow.
The sun rose the next morning on a cool, beautiful day, and the Consul’s boat, with the American flag trailing from the stern, rose and fell on the bluest of blue waters as it carried Holcombe and his friends to the steamer’s side.
“We are going to miss you very much,” Mrs. Carroll said. “I hope you won’t forget to send us word of yourself.”
Miss Terrill said nothing. She was leaning over the side trailing her hand in the water, and watching it run between her slim pink fingers. She raised her eyes to find Holcombe looking at her intently with a strange expression of wistfulness and pity, at which she smiled brightly back at him, and began to plan vivaciously with Captain Reese for a ride that same afternoon.
They separated over the steamer’s deck, and Meakim, for the hundredth time, and in the lack of conversation which comes at such moments, offered Holcombe a fresh cigar.
“But I have got eight of yours now,” said Holcombe.
“That’s all right; put it in your pocket,” said the Tammany chieftain, “and smoke it after dinner. You’ll need ’em. They’re better than those you’ll get on the steamer, and they never went through a custom-house.”
Holcombe cleared his throat in some slight embarrassment. “Is there anything I can do for you in New York, Meakim?” he asked. “Anybody I can see, or to whom I can deliver a message?”
“No,” said Meakim. “I write pretty often. Don’t you worry about me,” he added, gratefully. “I’ll be back there some day myself, when the law of limitation lets me.”
Holcombe laughed. “Well,” he said, “I’d be glad to do something for you if you’d let me know what you’d like.”
Meakim put his hands behind his back and puffed meditatively on his cigar, rolling it between his lips with his tongue. Then he turned it between his fingers and tossed the ashes over the side of the boat. He gave a little sigh, and then frowned at having done so. “I’ll tell you what you can do for me, Holcombe,” he said, smiling. “Some night I wish you would go down to Fourteenth Street, some night this spring, when the boys are sitting out on the steps in front of the Hall, and just take a drink for me at Ed Lally’s; just for luck. Will you? That’s what I’d like to do. I don’t know nothing better than Fourteenth Street of a summer evening, with all the people crowding into Pastor’s on one side of the Hall, and the Third Avenue L cars running by on the other. That’s a gay sight; ain’t it now? With all the girls coming in and out of Theiss’s, and the sidewalks crowded. One of them warm nights when they have to have the windows open, and you can hear the music in at Pastor’s, and the audience clapping their hands. That’s great, isn’t it? Well,” he laughed and shook his head. “I’ll be back there some day, won’t I,” he said, wistfully, “and hear it for myself.”
“Carroll,” said Holcombe, drawing the former to one side, “suppose I see this cabman when I reach home, and get him to withdraw the charge, or agree not to turn up when it comes to trial.”
Carroll’s face clouded in an instant. “Now, listen to me, Holcombe,” he said. “You let my dirty work alone. There’s lots of my friends who have nothing better to do than just that. You have something better to do, and you leave me and my rows to others. I like you for what you are, and not for what you can do for me. I don’t mean that I don’t appreciate your offer, but it shouldn’t have come from an Assistant District Attorney to a fugitive criminal.”
“What nonsense!” said Holcombe.
“Don’t say that; don’t say that!” said Carroll, quickly, as though it hurt him. “You wouldn’t have said it a month ago.”
Holcombe eyed the other with an alert, confident smile. “No, Carroll,” he answered, “I would not.” He put his hand on the other’s shoulder with a suggestion in his manner of his former self, and with a touch of patronage. “I have learned a great deal in a month,” he said. “Seven battles were won in seven days once. All my life I have been fighting causes, Carroll, and principles. I have been working with laws against law-breakers. I have never yet fought a man. It was not poor old Meakim, the individual, I prosecuted, but the corrupt politician. Now, here I have been thrown with men and women on as equal terms as a crew of sailors cast away upon a desert island. We were each a law unto himself. And I have been brought face to face, and for the first time in my life, not with principles of conduct, not with causes, and not with laws, but with my fellow men.”