"The civilized world is then rid of two villains at once," said the

uncompromising Traverse.

Herbert took from his pocket the confession of Colonel Le Noir, which

he said he was now at liberty to use as he thought proper for the ends

of justice. That certain parts of the disclosure intimately concerned

Traverse Rocke, to whom he should therefore read the whole. The

confession may be briefly summed up as follows: The first item was that he had sought to win the affections of Marah

Rocke, the supposed wife of Major Ira Warfield; he had sedulously

waylaid and followed her with his suit during the whole summer; she had

constantly repulsed and avoided him; he, listening to his own evil

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passions, had bribed her maid to admit him in the dark to Marah's

cabin, upon a certain night when her husband was to be absent; that the

unexpected return of Major Warfield, who had tracked him to the house,

had prevented the success of his evil purpose, but had not saved the

reputation of the innocent wife, whose infuriated husband would not

believe her ignorant of the presence of the villain in her house; that

he, Gabriel Le Noir, in hatred as well as in shame, had forborne until

now to make the explanation, which he hoped might now, late in life as

it was, bring the long-severed pair together, and establish Marah Rocke

and her son in their legal and social rights.

The second item in the black list of crime was the death of his elder

brother, whom he declared he had not intended to kill. He said that,

having contracted large debts which he was unable to pay he had

returned secretly from his distant quarters to demand the money from

his brother, who had often helped him; that, meeting his brother in the

woods, he made this request. Eugene reproached him for his extravagance

and folly, and refused to aid him; an encounter ensued, in which Eugene

fell. He, Gabriel Le Noir, fled pursued by the curse of Cain, and

reached his own quarters before even his absence had been suspected.

His agency in the death of his brother was not suspected even by his

accomplice in other crimes, the outlaw called Black Donald, who,

thinking to gain an ascendency over one whom he called his patron,

actually pretended to have made way with Eugene Le Noir for the sake of

his younger brother.

The third item of confession was the abduction of the nurse and babe of

the young widow of Eugene, the circumstances of which are already known

to the reader.




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