"Miss!" cried the astonished inn-keeper.

Capitola distinctly repeated her words and then, leaving the

inn-keeper, transfixed with consternation, she crossed the street and

entered a magistrate's office, where a little, old gentleman, with a

pair of green spectacles resting on his hooked nose, sat at a

writing-table, giving some directions to a constable, who was standing

hat in hand before him.

Capitola waited until this functionary had his orders and a written

paper, and had left the office, and the magistrate was alone, before

she walked up to the desk and stood before him.

"Well, well, young woman! Well, well, what do you want?" inquired the

old gentleman, impatiently looking up from folding his papers.

"I have come to give myself up for shooting Craven Le Noir, who

slandered me," answered Capitola, quietly.

The old man let fall his hands full of papers, raised his head and

stared at her over the tops of his green spectacles.

"What did you say, young woman?" he asked, in the tone of one who

doubted his own ears.

"I say that I have forestalled an arrest by coming here to give myself

up for the shooting of a dastard who slandered, insulted and refused to

give me satisfaction," answered Capitola, very distinctly.

"Am I awake? Do I hear aright? Do you mean to say that you have killed

a man?" asked the dismayed magistrate.

"Oh, I can't say as to the killing! I shot him off his horse and then

sent Mr. Merry and his men to pick him up, while I came here to answer

for myself!"

"Unfortunate girl! And how can you answer for such a dreadful deed?"

exclaimed the utterly confounded magistrate.

"Oh, as to the dreadfulness of the deed, that depends on

circumstances," said Cap, "and I can answer for it very well! He made

addresses to me. I refused him. He slandered me. I challenged him. He

insulted me. I shot him!"

"Miserable young woman, if this be proved true, I shall have to commit

you!"

"Just as you please," said Cap, "but bless your soul, that won't help

Craven Le Noir a single bit!"

As she spoke several persons entered the office in a state of high

excitement--all talking at once, saying: "That is the girl!"

"Yes, that is her!"

"She is Miss Black, old Warfield's niece."

"Yes, he said she was," etc., etc., etc.

"What is all this, neighbors, what is all this?" inquired the troubled

magistrate, rising in his place.




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