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PAGE 4

The Exit Of Anse Dugmore
by [?]

The governor nodded understandingly. “What sort of a record has he made here?”

“Oh, fair enough!” said the warden. “Those man-killers from the mountains generally make good prisoners. Funny thing about this fellow, though. All the time he’s been here he never, so far as I know, had a message or a visitor or a line of writing from the outside. Nor wrote a letter out himself. Nor made friends with anybody, convict or guard.”

“Has he applied for a pardon?” asked the governor.

“Lord, no!” said the warden. “When he was well he just took what was coming to him, the same as he’s taking it now. I can look up his record, though, if you’d care to see it, sir.”

“I believe I should,” said the governor quietly.

A spectacled young wife-murderer, who worked in the prison office on the prison books, got down a book and looked through it until he came to a certain entry on a certain page. The warden was right–so far as the black marks of the prison discipline went, the friendless convict’s record showed fair.

“I think,” said the young governor to the warden and his secretary when they had moved out of hearing of the convict bookkeeper–“I think I’ll give that poor devil a pardon for a Christmas gift. It’s no more than a mercy to let him die at home, if he has any home to go to.”

“I could have him brought in and let you tell him yourself, sir,” volunteered the warden.

“No, no,” said the governor quickly. “I don’t want to hear that cough again. Nor look on such a wreck,” he added.

Two days before Christmas the warden sent to the hospital ward for No. 874. No. 874, that being Anse Dugmore, came shuffling in and kept himself upright by holding with one hand to the door jamb. The warden sat rotund and impressive, in a swivel chair, holding in his hands a folded-up, blue-backed document.

“Dugmore,” he said in his best official manner, “when His Excellency, Governor Woodford, was here on Sunday he took notice that your general health was not good. So, of his own accord, he has sent you an unconditional pardon for a Christmas gift, and here it is.”

The sick convict’s eyes, between their festering lids, fixed on the warden’s face and a sudden light flickered in their pale, glazed shallows; but he didn’t speak. There was a little pause.

“I said the governor has given you a pardon,” repeated the warden, staring hard at him.

“I heered you the fust time,” croaked the prisoner in his eaten-out voice. “When kin I go?”

“Is that all you’ve got to say?” demanded the warden, bristling up.

“I said, when kin I go?” repeated No. 874.

“Go!–you can go now. You can’t go too soon to suit me!”

The warden swung his chair around and showed him the broad of his indignant back. When he had filled out certain forms at his desk he shoved a pen into the silent consumptive’s fingers and showed him crossly where to make his mark. At a signal from his bent forefinger a negro trusty came forward and took the pardoned man away and helped him put his shrunken limbs into a suit of the prison-made slops, of cheap, black shoddy, with the taint of a jail thick and heavy on it. A deputy warden thrust into Dugmore’s hands a railroad ticket and the five dollars that the law requires shall be given to a freed felon. He took them without a word and, still without a word, stepped out of the gate that swung open for him and into a light, spitty snowstorm. With the inbred instinct of the hillsman he swung about and headed for the little, light-blue station at the head of the crooked street. He went slowly, coughing often as the cold air struck into his wasted lungs, and sometimes staggering up against the fences. Through a barred window the wondering warden sourly watched the crawling, tottery figure.