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Rhoda Fleming. Complete
“Eh! poor old Bob!” Stephen sighed and sipped. “I can cry that with any of you. It’s worse for me to see than for you to hear of him. Wasn’t I always a friend of his, and said he was worthy to be a gentleman, many a time? He’s got the manners of a gentleman now; offs with his hat, if there’s a lady present, and such a neat way of speaking. But there, acting’s the thing, and his behaviour’s beastly bad! You can’t call it no other. There’s two Mr. Blancoves up at Fairly, relations of Mrs. Lovell’s—whom I’ll take the liberty of calling My Beauty, and no offence meant: and it’s before her that Bob only yesterday rode up—one of the gentlemen being Mr. Algernon, free of hand and a good seat in the saddle, t’ other’s Mr. Edward; but Mr. Algernon, he’s Robert Eccles’s man—up rides Bob, just as we was tying Mr. Reenard’s brush to the pommel of the lady’s saddle, down in Ditley Marsh; and he bows to the lady. Says he—but he’s mad, stark mad!”
Stephen resumed his pipe amid a din of disappointment that made the walls ring and the glasses leap.
“A little more sugar, Stephen?” said Mrs. Boulby, moving in lightly from the doorway.
“Thank ye, mum; you’re the best hostess that ever breathed.”
“So she be; but how about Bob?” cried her guests—some asking whether he carried a pistol or flourished a stick.
“Ne’er a blessed twig, to save his soul; and there’s the madness written on him;” Stephen roared as loud as any of them. “And me to see him riding in the ring there, and knowing what the gentleman had sworn to do if he came across the hunt; and feeling that he was in the wrong! I haven’t got a oath to swear how mad I was. Fancy yourselves in my place. I love old Bob. I’ve drunk with him; I owe him obligations from since I was a boy up’ard; I don’t know a better than Bob in all England. And there he was: and says to Mr. Algernon, ‘You know what I’m come for.’ I never did behold a gentleman so pale—shot all over his cheeks as he was, and pinkish under the eyes; if you’ve ever noticed a chap laid hands on by detectives in plain clothes. Smack at Bob went Mr. Edward’s whip.”
“Mr. Algernon’s,” Stephen was corrected.
“Mr. Edward’s, I tell ye—the cousin. And right across the face. My Lord! it made my blood tingle.”
A sound like the swish of a whip expressed the sentiments of that assemblage at the Pilot.
“Bob swallowed it?”
“What else could he do, the fool? He had nothing to help him but his hand. Says he, ‘That’s a poor way of trying to stop me. My business is with this gentleman;’ and Bob set his horse at Mr. Algernon, and Mrs. Lovell rode across him with her hand raised; and just at that moment up jogged the old gentleman, Squire Blancove, of Wrexby: and Robert Eccles says to him, ‘You might have saved your son something by keeping your word.’ It appears according to Bob, that the squire had promised to see his son, and settle matters. All Mrs. Lovell could do was hardly enough to hold back Mr. Edward from laying out at Bob. He was like a white devil, and speaking calm and polite all the time. Says Bob, ‘I’m willing to take one when I’ve done with the other;’ and the squire began talking to his son, Mrs. Lovell to Mr. Edward, and the rest of the gentlemen all round poor dear old Bob, rather bullying—like for my blood; till Bob couldn’t help being nettled, and cried out, ‘Gentlemen, I hold him in my power, and I’m silent so long as there’s a chance of my getting him to behave like a man with human feelings.’ If they’d gone at him then, I don’t think I could have let him stand alone: an opinion’s one thing, but blood’s another, and I’m distantly related to Bob; and a man who’s always thinking of the value of his place, he ain’t worth it. But Mrs. Lovell, she settled the case—a lady, Farmer Wainsby, with your leave. There’s the good of having a lady present on the field. That’s due to a lady!”
“Happen she was at the bottom of it,” the farmer returned Stephen’s nod grumpily.
“How did it end, Stephen, my lad?” said Butcher Billing, indicating a “never mind him.”
“It ended, my boy, it ended like my glass here—hot and strong stuff, with sugar at the bottom. And I don’t see this, so glad as I saw that, my word of honour on it! Boys all!” Stephen drank the dregs.
Mrs. Boulby was still in attendance. The talk over the circumstances was sweeter than the bare facts, and the replenished glass enabled Stephen to add the picturesque bits of the affray, unspurred by a surrounding eagerness of his listeners—too exciting for imaginative effort. In particular, he dwelt on Robert’s dropping the reins and riding with his heels at Algernon, when Mrs. Lovell put her horse in his way, and the pair of horses rose like waves at sea, and both riders showed their horsemanship, and Robert an adroit courtesy, for which the lady thanked him with a bow of her head.
“I got among the hounds, pretending to pacify them, and call ‘em together,” said Stephen, “and I heard her say—just before all was over, and he turned off—I heard her say: ‘Trust this to me: I will meet you.’ I’ll swear to them exact words, though there was more, and a ‘where’ in the bargain, and that I didn’t hear. Aha! by George! thinks I, old Bob, you’re a lucky beggar, and be hanged if I wouldn’t go mad too for a minute or so of short, sweet, private talk with a lovely young widow lady as ever the sun did shine upon so boldly—oho!
You’ve seen a yacht upon the sea,She dances and she dances, O!As fair is my wild maid to me…Something about ‘prances, O!’ on her horse, you know, or you’re a hem’d fool if you don’t. I never could sing; wish I could! It’s the joy of life! It’s utterance! Hey for harmony!”
“Eh! brayvo! now you’re a man, Steeve! and welcomer and welcomest; yi—yi, O!” jolly Butcher Billing sang out sharp. “Life wants watering. Here’s a health to Robert Eccles, wheresoever and whatsoever! and ne’er a man shall say of me I didn’t stick by a friend like Bob. Cheers, my lads!”
Robert’s health was drunk in a thunder, and praises of the purity of the brandy followed the grand roar. Mrs. Boulby received her compliments on that head.
“‘Pends upon the tide, Missis, don’t it?” one remarked with a grin broad enough to make the slyness written on it easy reading.
“Ah! first a flow and then a ebb,” said another.
“It’s many a keg I plant i’ the mud,Coastguardsman, come! and I’ll have your blood!”Instigation cried, “Cut along;” but the defiant smuggler was deficient in memory, and like Steeve Bilton, was reduced to scatter his concluding rhymes in prose, as “something about;” whereat jolly Butcher Billing, a reader of song-books from a literary delight in their contents, scraped his head, and then, as if he had touched a spring, carolled,—
“In spite of all you Gov’ment pack,I’ll land my kegs of the good Cognyac”—“though,” he took occasion to observe when the chorus and a sort of cracker of irrelevant rhymes had ceased to explode; “I’m for none of them games. Honesty!—there’s the sugar o’ my grog.”
“Ay, but you like to be cock-sure of the stuff you drink, if e’er a man did,” said the boatbuilder, whose eye blazed yellow in this frothing season of song and fun.
“Right so, Will Moody!” returned the jolly butcher: “which means—not wrong this time!”
“Then, what’s understood by your sticking prongs into your hostess here concerning of her brandy? Here it is—which is enough, except for discontented fellows.”
“Eh, Missus?” the jolly butcher appealed to her, and pointed at Moody’s complexion for proof.
It was quite a fiction that kegs of the good cognac were sown at low water, and reaped at high, near the river-gate of the old Pilot Inn garden; but it was greatly to Mrs. Boulby’s interest to encourage the delusion which imaged her brandy thus arising straight from the very source, without villanous contact with excisemen and corrupting dealers; and as, perhaps, in her husband’s time, the thing had happened, and still did, at rare intervals, she complacently gathered the profitable fame of her brandy being the best in the district.
“I’m sure I hope you’re satisfied, Mr. Billing,” she said.
The jolly butcher asked whether Will Moody was satisfied, and Mr. William Moody declaring himself thoroughly satisfied, “then I’m satisfied too!” said the jolly butcher; upon which the boatbuilder heightened the laugh by saying he was not satisfied at all; and to escape from the execrations of the majority, pleaded that it was because his glass was empty: thus making his peace with them. Every glass in the room was filled again.
The young fellows now loosened tongue; and Dick Curtis, the promising cricketer of Hampshire, cried, “Mr. Moody, my hearty! that’s your fourth glass, so don’t quarrel with me, now!”
“You!” Moody fired up in a bilious frenzy, and called him a this and that and t’ other young vagabond; for which the company, feeling the ominous truth contained in Dick Curtis’s remark more than its impertinence, fined Mr. Moody in a song. He gave the—
“So many young Captains have walked o’er my pate,It’s no wonder you see me quite bald, sir,”with emphatic bitterness, and the company thanked him. Seeing him stand up as to depart, however, a storm of contempt was hurled at him; some said he was like old Sedgett, and was afraid of his wife; and some, that he was like Nic Sedgett, and drank blue.
“You’re a bag of blue devils, oh dear! oh dear!”sang Dick to the tune of “The Campbells are coming.”
“I ask e’er a man present,” Mr. Moody put out his fist, “is that to be borne? Didn’t you,” he addressed Dick Curtis,—“didn’t you sing into my chorus—”
‘It’s no wonder to hear how you squall’d, sir?’“You did!”
“Don’t he,”—Dick addressed the company, “make Mrs. Boulby’s brandy look ashamed of itself in his face? I ask e’er a gentleman present.”
Accusation and retort were interchanged, in the course of which, Dick called Mr. Moody Nic Sedgett’s friend; and a sort of criminal inquiry was held. It was proved that Moody had been seen with Nic Sedgett; and then three or four began to say that Nic Sedgett was thick with some of the gentlemen up at Fairly;—just like his luck! Stephen let it be known that he could confirm this fact; he having seen Mr. Algernon Blancove stop Nic on the road and talk to him.
“In that case,” said Butcher Billing, “there’s mischief in a state of fermentation. Did ever anybody see Nic and the devil together?”
“I saw Nic and Mr. Moody together,” said Dick Curtis. “Well, I’m only stating a fact,” he exclaimed, as Moody rose, apparently to commence an engagement, for which the company quietly prepared, by putting chairs out of his way: but the recreant took his advantage from the error, and got away to the door, pursued.
“Here’s an example of what we lose in having no President,” sighed the jolly butcher. “There never was a man built for the chair like Bob Eccles I say! Our evening’s broke up, and I, for one, ‘d ha’ made it morning. Hark, outside; By Gearge! they’re snowballing.”
An adjournment to the front door brought them in view of a white and silent earth under keen stars, and Dick Curtis and the bilious boatbuilder, foot to foot, snowball in hand. A bout of the smart exercise made Mr. Moody laugh again, and all parted merrily, delivering final shots as they went their several ways.
“Thanks be to heaven for snowing,” said Mrs. Boulby; “or when I should have got to my bed, Goodness only can tell!” With which, she closed the door upon the empty inn.
CHAPTER XIX
The night was warm with the new-fallen snow, though the stars sparkled coldly. A fleet of South-westerly rainclouds had been met in mid-sky by a sharp puff from due North, and the moisture had descended like a woven shroud, covering all the land, the house-tops, and the trees.
Young Harry Boulby was at sea, and this still weather was just what a mother’s heart wished for him. The widow looked through her bed-room window and listened, as if the absolute stillness must beget a sudden cry. The thought of her boy made her heart revert to Robert. She was thinking of Robert when the muffled sound of a horse at speed caused her to look up the street, and she saw one coming—a horse without a rider. The next minute he was out of sight.
Mrs. Boulby stood terrified. The silence of the night hanging everywhere seemed to call on her for proof that she had beheld a real earthly spectacle, and the dead thump of the hooves on the snow-floor in passing struck a chill through her as being phantom-like. But she had seen a saddle on the horse, and the stirrups flying, and the horse looked affrighted. The scene was too earthly in its suggestion of a tale of blood. What if the horse were Robert’s? She tried to laugh at her womanly fearfulness, and had almost to suppress a scream in doing so. There was no help for it but to believe her brandy as good and efficacious as her guests did, so she went downstairs and took a fortifying draught; after which her blood travelled faster, and the event galloped swiftly into the recesses of time, and she slept.
While the morning was still black, and the streets without a sign of life, she was aroused by a dream of some one knocking at her grave-stone. “Ah, that brandy!” she sighed. “This is what a poor woman has to pay for custom!” Which we may interpret as the remorseful morning confession of a guilt she had been the victim of over night. She knew that good brandy did not give bad dreams, and was self-convicted. Strange were her sensations when the knocking continued; and presently she heard a voice in the naked street below call in a moan, “Mother!”
“My darling!” she answered, divided in her guess at its being Harry or Robert.
A glance from the open window showed Robert leaning in the quaint old porch, with his head bound by a handkerchief; but he had no strength to reply to a question at that distance, and when she let him in he made two steps and dropped forward on the floor.
Lying there, he plucked at her skirts. She was shouting for help, but with her ready apprehension of the pride in his character, she knew what was meant by his broken whisper before she put her ear to his lips, and she was silent, miserable sight as was his feeble efforts to rise on an elbow that would not straighten.
His head was streaming with blood, and the stain was on his neck and chest. He had one helpless arm; his clothes were torn as from a fierce struggle.
“I’m quite sensible,” he kept repeating, lest she should relapse into screams.
“Lord love you for your spirit!” exclaimed the widow, and there they remained, he like a winged eagle, striving to raise himself from time to time, and fighting with his desperate weakness. His face was to the ground; after a while he was still. In alarm the widow stooped over him: she feared that he had given up his last breath; but the candle-light showed him shaken by a sob, as it seemed to her, though she could scarce believe it of this manly fellow. Yet it proved true; she saw the very tears. He was crying at his helplessness.
“Oh, my darling boy!” she burst out; “what have they done to ye? the cowards they are! but do now have pity on a woman, and let me get some creature to lift you to a bed, dear. And don’t flap at me with your hand like a bird that’s shot. You’re quite, quite sensible, I know; quite sensible, dear; but for my sake, Robert, my Harry’s good friend, only for my sake, let yourself be a carried to a clean, nice bed, till I get Dr. Bean to you. Do, do.”
Her entreaties brought on a succession of the efforts to rise, and at last, getting round on his back, and being assisted by the widow, he sat up against the wall. The change of posture stupified him with a dizziness. He tried to utter the old phrase, that he was sensible, but his hand beat at his forehead before the words could be shaped.
“What pride is when it’s a man!” the widow thought, as he recommenced the grievous struggle to rise on his feet; now feeling them up to the knee with a questioning hand, and pausing as if in a reflective wonder, and then planting them for a spring that failed wretchedly; groaning and leaning backward, lost in a fit of despair, and again beginning, patient as an insect imprisoned in a circle.
The widow bore with his man’s pride, until her nerves became afflicted by the character of his movements, which, as her sensations conceived them, were like those of a dry door jarring loose. She caught him in her arms: “It’s let my back break, but you shan’t fret to death there, under my eyes, proud or humble, poor dear,” she said, and with a great pull she got him upright. He fell across her shoulder with so stiff a groan that for a moment she thought she had done him mortal injury.
“Good old mother,” he said boyishly, to reassure her.
“Yes; and you’ll behave to me like a son,” she coaxed him.
They talked as by slow degrees the stairs were ascended.
“A crack o’ the head, mother—a crack o’ the head,” said he.
“Was it the horse, my dear?”
“A crack o’ the head, mother.”
“What have they done to my boy Robert?”
“They’ve,”—he swung about humorously, weak as he was and throbbing with pain—“they’ve let out some of your brandy, mother…got into my head.”
“Who’ve done it, my dear?”
“They’ve done it, mother.”
“Oh, take care o’ that nail at your foot; and oh, that beam to your poor poll—poor soul! he’s been and hurt himself again. And did they do it to him? and what was it for?” she resumed in soft cajolery.
“They did it, because—”
“Yes, my dear; the reason for it?”
“Because, mother, they had a turn that way.”
“Thanks be to Above for leaving your cunning in you, my dear,” said the baffled woman, with sincere admiration. “And Lord be thanked, if you’re not hurt bad, that they haven’t spoilt his handsome face,” she added.
In the bedroom, he let her partially undress him, refusing all doctor’s aid, and commanding her to make no noise about him and then he lay down and shut his eyes, for the pain was terrible—galloped him and threw him with a shock—and galloped him and threw him again, whenever his thoughts got free for a moment from the dizzy aching.
“My dear,” she whispered, “I’m going to get a little brandy.”
She hastened away upon this mission.
He was in the same posture when she returned with bottle and glass.
She poured out some, and made much of it as a specific, and of the great things brandy would do; but he motioned his hand from it feebly, till she reproached him tenderly as perverse and unkind.
“Now, my dearest boy, for my sake—only for my sake. Will you? Yes, you will, my Robert!”
“No brandy, mother.”
“Only one small thimbleful?”
“No more brandy for me!”
“See, dear, how seriously you take it, and all because you want the comfort.”
“No brandy,” was all he could say.
She looked at the label on the bottle. Alas! she knew whence it came, and what its quality. She could cheat herself about it when herself only was concerned—but she wavered at the thought of forcing it upon Robert as trusty medicine, though it had a pleasant taste, and was really, as she conceived, good enough for customers.
She tried him faintly with arguments in its favour; but his resolution was manifested by a deaf ear.
With a perfect faith in it she would, and she was conscious that she could, have raised his head and poured it down his throat. The crucial test of her love for Robert forbade the attempt. She burst into an uncontrollable fit of crying.
“Halloa! mother,” said Robert, opening his eyes to the sad candlelight surrounding them.
“My darling boy! whom I do love so; and not to be able to help you! What shall I do—what shall I do!”
With a start, he cried, “Where’s the horse!”
“The horse?”
“The old dad ‘ll be asking for the horse to-morrow.”
“I saw a horse, my dear, afore I turned to my prayers at my bedside, coming down the street without his rider. He came like a rumble of deafness in my ears. Oh, my boy, I thought, Is it Robert’s horse?—knowing you’ve got enemies, as there’s no brave man has not got ‘em—which is our only hope in the God of heaven!”
“Mother, punch my ribs.”
He stretched himself flat for the operation, and shut his mouth.
“Hard, mother!—and quick!—I can’t hold out long.”
“Oh! Robert,” moaned the petrified woman “strike you?”
“Straight in the ribs. Shut your fist and do it—quick.”
“My dear!—my boy!—I haven’t the heart to do it!”
“Ah!” Robert’s chest dropped in; but tightening his muscles again, he said, “now do it—do it!”
“Oh! a poke at a poor fire puts it out, dear. And make a murderess of me, you call mother! Oh! as I love the name, I’ll obey you, Robert. But!—there!”
“Harder, mother.”
“There!—goodness forgive me!”
“Hard as you can—all’s right.”
“There!—and there!—oh!—mercy!”
“Press in at my stomach.”
She nerved herself to do his bidding, and, following his orders, took his head in her hands, and felt about it. The anguish of the touch wrung a stifled scream from him, at which she screamed responsive. He laughed, while twisting with the pain.
“You cruel boy, to laugh at your mother,” she said, delighted by the sound of safety in that sweet human laughter. “Hey! don’t ye shake your brain; it ought to lie quiet. And here’s the spot of the wicked blow—and him in love—as I know he is! What would she say if she saw him now? But an old woman’s the best nurse—ne’er a doubt of it.”
She felt him heavy on her arm, and knew that he had fainted. Quelling her first impulse to scream, she dropped him gently on the pillow, and rapped to rouse up her maid.
The two soon produced a fire and hot water, bandages, vinegar in a basin, and every crude appliance that could be thought of, the maid followed her mistress’s directions with a consoling awe, for Mrs. Boulby had told her no more than that a man was hurt.
“I do hope, if it’s anybody, it’s that ther’ Moody,” said the maid.
“A pretty sort of a Christian you think yourself, I dare say,” Mrs. Boulby replied.
“Christian or not, one can’t help longin’ for a choice, mum. We ain’t all hands and knees.”
“Better for you if you was,” said the widow. “It’s tongues, you’re to remember, you’re not to be. Now come you up after me—and you’ll not utter a word. You’ll stand behind the door to do what I tell you. You’re a soldier’s daughter, Susan, and haven’t a claim to be excitable.”
“My mother was given to faints,” Susan protested on behalf of her possible weakness.
“You may peep.” Thus Mrs. Boulby tossed a sop to her frail woman’s nature.
But for her having been appeased by the sagacious accordance of this privilege, the maid would never have endured to hear Robert’s voice in agony, and to think that it was really Robert, the beloved of Warbeach, who had come to harm. Her apprehensions not being so lively as her mistress’s, by reason of her love being smaller, she was more terrified than comforted by Robert’s jokes during the process of washing off the blood, cutting the hair from the wound, bandaging and binding up the head.
His levity seemed ghastly; and his refusal upon any persuasion to see a doctor quite heathenish, and a sign of one foredoomed.
She believed that his arm was broken, and smarted with wrath at her mistress for so easily taking his word to the contrary. More than all, his abjuration of brandy now when it would do him good to take it, struck her as an instance of that masculine insanity in the comprehension of which all women must learn to fortify themselves. There was much whispering in the room, inarticulate to her, before Mrs. Boulby came out; enjoining a rigorous silence, and stating that the patient would drink nothing but tea.
“He begged,” she said half to herself, “to have the window blinds up in the morning, if the sun wasn’t strong, for him to look on our river opening down to the ships.”
“That looks as if he meant to live,” Susan remarked.
“He!” cried the widow, “it’s Robert Eccles. He’d stand on his last inch.”
“Would he, now!” ejaculated Susan, marvelling at him, with no question as to what footing that might be.
“Leastways,” the widow hastened to add, “if he thought it was only devils against him. I’ve heard him say, ‘It’s a fool that holds out against God, and a coward as gives in to the devil;’ and there’s my Robert painted by his own hand.”
“But don’t that bring him to this so often, Mum?” Susan ruefully inquired, joining teapot and kettle.
“I do believe he’s protected,” said the widow.
With the first morning light Mrs. Boulby was down at Warbeach Farm, and being directed to Farmer Eccles in the stables, she found the sturdy yeoman himself engaged in grooming Robert’s horse.