Myra lay in a crumpled heap, her face upturned, open-eyed, expressionless, as if death had either caught her in a moment of impassivity or with his clammy hands had forever wiped out all expression from her features. There were no visible marks on her,—but a red stain was creeping slowly from under her body, spreading across the rough floor.
Mills sat on the floor, his back against the wall, his hands braced on his knees to keep his body erect. And upon him there was to be seen no visible mark of the murderer’s bullet. But his dark-skinned face had turned waxy white. His lips were colorless. Every breath he drew was a laborious effort. A ghastly smile spread slowly over his face as he looked up at Hollister and Lawanne.
“You fool. You damned, murdering fool!” Lawanne turned on Bland. “You did this?”
Bland did not answer. He put his hand to his face and wiped away the sweat that had gathered in a shiny film on his skin, from which all the ruddiness had fled. Myra’s pale, dead face seemed to hold him in some horrible fascination.
Hollister shook him.
“Why did you do that?” he demanded.
Bland heaved a shuddering sigh. He looked up and about him stupidly.
“I don’t know,” he croaked. “I don’t know—I don’t know.”
A gleam of something like reason came into his eyes.
“I suppose I shall have to give myself up to the authorities,” he mumbled. “My God!”
The last two words burst from his lips like a cry, as for the first time he saw the full import of what he had done, realized the horror, the madness, and the consequences of his act. He shrank against the wall with a groan, putting out his hands as if to ward off some invisible enemy. Then, thrusting Hollister aside, he rushed out of the door, his rifle still clasped in both hands. He ran down the bank, out into the shallows of the river, splashing through water to his knees. He gained the opposite side where the heavy woods lifted silent and solemn, full of dusky places. Into that—whether for sanctuary or driven by some unreckoning panic, they did not know—but into that he plunged, the last sight either Hollister or Lawanne ever had of him.
They turned to Mills. Myra was dead. They could do nothing for her. But Mills still lived. The sound of his labored breathing filled the room. He had shifted a little, so that he could reach out and lay one hand on the dead woman’s face, where it rested, with a caressing touch. A red pool was gathering where he sat.
“How bad are you hurt, Charlie?” Hollister said. “Let me see.”
“No use,” Mills said thickly. “I’m done. He got me right through the middle. And I wouldn’t live if I could. Not now.
“Don’t touch me,” he protested, as they bent over him. “You can’t do anything. There’s a hole in me you could put your hand in. But it don’t hurt. I won’t last more than a minute or two, anyway.”