That little moorland glen, whose only
murmur was of wavelets, and principal traffic of birds
and rabbits, even at this time of year looked pretty,
with the winter light winding down its shelter and
soft quietude. Ferny pitches and grassy bends
set off the harsh outline of rock and shale, while
a white mist (quivering like a clew above the rivulet)
was melting into the faint blue haze diffused among
the foldings and recesses of the land. On the
hither side, nearly at the bottom of the slope, a
bright green spot among the brown and yellow roughness,
looking by comparison most smooth and rich, showed
where the little cottage grew its vegetables, and
even indulged in a small attempt at fruit. Behind
this, the humble retirement of the cot was shielded
from the wind by a breastwork of bold rock, fringed
with ground-ivy, hanging broom, and silver stars of
the carline. So simple and low was the building,
and so matched with the colors around it, that but
for the smoke curling up from a pipe of red pottery-ware,
a stranger might almost have overlooked it. The
walls were made from the rocks close by, the roof
of fir slabs thatched with ling; there was no upper
story, and (except the door and windows) all the materials
seemed native and at home. Lancelot had heard,
by putting a crafty question in safe places, that
the people of the gill here had built their own dwelling,
a good many years ago; and it looked as if they could
have done it easily.
Now, if he intended to spy out the
land, and the house as well, before the giant of the
axe returned, there was no time to lose in beginning.
He had a good deal of sagacity in tricks, and some
practice in little arts of robbery. For before
he attained to this exalted state of mind one of his
favorite pastimes had been a course of stealthy raids
upon the pears in Scargate garden. He might have
had as many as he liked for asking; but what flavor
would they have thus possessed? Moreover, he
bore a noble spite against the gardener, whose special
pride was in that pear wall; and Pet more than once
had the joy of beholding him thrash his own innocent
son for the dark disappearance of Beurre and Bergamot.
Making good use of this experience, he stole his way
down the steep glen-side, behind the low fence of
the garden, until he reached the bottom, and the brush-wood
by the stream. Here he stopped to observe again,
and breathe, and get his spirit up. The glassy
water looked as cold as death; and if he got cramp
in his feet, how could he run? And yet he could
see no other way but wading, of approaching the cottage
unperceived.
Now fortune (whose privilege it is
to cast mortals into the holes that most misfit them)
sometimes, when she has got them there, takes pity,
and contemptuously lifts them. Pet was in a hole
of hardship, such as his dear mamma never could have
dreamed of, and such as his nurture and constitution
made trebly disastrous for him. He had taken a
chill from his ambush, and fright, and the cold wind
over the snow of the moor; and now the long wading
of that icy water might have ended upon the shores
of Acheron. However, he was just about to start
upon that passage — for the spirit of his
race was up — when a dull grating sound, as
of footsteps crunching grit, came to his prettily
concave ears.
At this sound Lancelot Carnaby stopped
from his rash venture into the water, and drew himself
back into an ivied bush, which served as the finial
of the little garden hedge. Peeping through this,
he could see that the walk from the cottage to the
hedge was newly sprinkled with gray wood ash, perhaps
to prevent the rain from lodging and the snow from
lying there. Heavy steps of two old men (as Pet
in the insolence of young days called them) fell upon
the dull soft crust, and ground it, heel and toe — heel
first, as stiff joints have it — with the
bruising snip a hungry cow makes, grazing wiry grasses.
“One of them must be Insie’s dad,”
said Pet to himself, as he crouched more closely behind
the hedge; “which of them, I wonder? Well,
the tall one, I suppose, to go by the height of that
Maunder. And the other has only one arm; and a
man with one arm could never have built their house.
They are coming to sit on that bench; I shall hear
every word they say, and learn some of their secrets
that I never could get out of Insie one bit of.
But I wonder who that other fellow is?”
That other fellow, in spite of his
lease, would promptly have laid his surviving hand
to the ear of Master Lancelot, or any other eavesdropper;
for a sturdy and resolute man was he, being no less
than our ancient friend and old soldier, Jack of the
Smithies. And now was verified that homely proverb
that listeners never hear good of themselves.
“Sit down, my friend,”
said the elder of the twain, a man of rough dress
and hard hands, but good, straightforward aspect, and
that careless humor which generally comes from a life
of adventures, and a long acquaintance with the world’s
caprice. “I have brought you here that we
may be undisturbed. Little pitchers have long
ears. My daughter is as true as steel; but this
matter is not for her at present. You are sure,
then, that Sir Duncan is come home at last? And
he wished that I should know it?”
“Yes, sir, he wished that you
should know it. So soon as I told him that you
was here, and leading what one may call this queer
life, he slapped his thigh like this here — for
he hath a downright way of everything — and
he said, ’Now, Smithies, so soon as you get home,
go and tell him that I am coming. I can trust
him as I trust myself; and glad I am for one old friend
in the parts I am such a stranger to. Years and
years I have longed to know what was become of my
old friend Bert.’ Tears was in his eyes,
your honor: Sir Duncan hath seen such a mighty
lot of men, that his heart cometh up to the few he
hath found deserving of the name, sir.”
“You said that you saw him at York, I think?”
“Yes, sir, at the business house
of his agent, one Master Geoffrey Mordacks. He
come there quite unexpected, I believe, to see about
something else he hath in hand, and I got a message
to go there at once. I save his life once in
India, sir, from one of they cursed Sours, which made
him take heed of me, and me of him. And then it
come out where I come from, and why; and the both
of us spoke the broad Yorkshire together, like as
I dea naa care to do to home. After that
he got on wonderful, as you know; and I stuck to him
through the whole of it, from luck as well as liking,
till, if I had gone out to see to his breeches, I
could not very well have knowed more of him. And
I tell you, sir, not to regard him for a Yordas.
He hath a mind far above them lot; though I was born
under them, to say so!”
“And you think that he will
come and recover his rights, in spite of his father’s
will against him. I know nothing of the ladies
of the Hall; but it seems a hard thing to turn them
out, after being there so long.”
“Who was turned out first, they
or him? Five-and-twenty years of tent, open sky,
jungle, and who knows what, for him — but
eider-down, and fireside, and fat of land for them!
No, no, sir; whatever shall happen there, will be
God’s own justice.”
“Of His justice who shall judge?”
said Insie’s father, quietly. “But
is there not a young man grown, who passes for the
heir with every one?”
“Ay, that there is; and the
best game of all will be neck and crop for that young
scamp. A bully, a coward, a puling milksop, is
all the character he beareth. He giveth himself
born airs, as if every inch of the Riding belonged
to him. He hath all the viciousness of Yordas,
without the pluck to face it out. A little beast
that hath the venom, without the courage, of a toad.
Ah, how I should like to see — ”
Jack of the Smithies not only saw,
but felt. The Yordas blood was up in Pet.
He leaped through the hedge and struck this man with
a sharp quick fist in either eye. Smithies fell
backward behind the bench, his heels danced in the
air, and the stump of his arm got wedged in the stubs
of a bush, while Lancelot glared at him with mad eyes.
“What next?” said his
companion, rising calmly, and steadfastly gazing at
Lancelot.
“The next thing is to kill him;
and it shall be done,” the furious youth replied,
while he swung the gentleman’s big stick, which
he had seized, and danced round his foe with the speed
of a wild-cat. “Don’t meddle, or
it will be worse for you. You heard what he said
of me. Get out of the way.”
“Indeed, my young friend, I
shall do nothing of the sort.” But the old
man was not at all sure that he could do much; such
was the fury and agility of the youth, who jumped
three yards for every step of his, while the poor
old soldier could not move. The boy skipped round
the protecting figure, whose grasp he eluded easily,
and swinging the staff with both arms, aimed a great
blow at the head of his enemy. Suddenly the other
interposed the bench, upon which the stick fell, and
broke short; and before the assailant could recover
from the jerk, he was a prisoner in two powerful old
arms.
“You are so wild that we must
make you fast,” his captor said, with a benignant
smile; and struggle as he might, the boy was very soon
secured. His antagonist drew forth a red bandana
handkerchief, and fastened his bleeding hands behind
his back. “There, now, lad,” he said,
“you can do no mischief. Recover your temper,
sir, and tell us who you are, as soon as you are sane
enough to know.”
Pet, having spent his just indignation,
began to perceive that he had made a bad investment.
His desire had been to maintain in this particular
spot strict privacy from all except Insie, to whom
in the largeness of love he had declared himself.
Yet here he stood, promulged and published, strikingly
and flagrantly pronounced! At first he was like
to sulk in the style of a hawk who has failed of his
swoop; but seeing his enemy arising slowly with grunts,
and action nodose and angular — rather than
flexibly graceful — contempt became the uppermost
feature of his mind.
“My name,” he said, “if
you are not afraid of it, that you tie me in this
cowardly low manner, is — Lancelot Yordas
Carnaby.”
“My boy, it is a long name for
any one to carry. No wonder that you look weak
beneath it. And where do you live, young gentleman?”
Amazement sat upon the face of Pet — a
genuine astonishment, entirely pure from wrath.
It was wholly beyond his imagination that any one,
after hearing his name, should have to ask him where
he lived. He thought that the question must be
put in low mockery, and to answer was far beneath
his dignity.
By this time the veteran Jack of the
Smithies had got out of his trap, and was standing
stiffly, passing his hand across his sadly smitten
eyes, and talking to himself about them.
“Two black eyes, at my time
of life, as sure as I’m a Christian! Howsomever,
young chap, I likes you better. Never dreamed
there was such good stuff in you. Master Bert,
cast him loose, if so please you. Let me shake
hands with ’un, and bear no malice. Bad
words deserve hard blows, and I ask his pardon for
driving him into it. I called ’un a milksop,
and he hath proved me a liar. He may be a bad
’un, but with good stuff in ’un.
Lord bless me, I never would have believed the lad
could hit so smartly!”
Pet was well pleased with this tribute
to his prowess; but as for shaking hands with a tenant,
and a “common man” — as every
one not of gentle birth was then called — such
an act was quite below him, or above him, according
as we take his own opinion, or the truth. And
possibly he rose in Smithies’ mind by drawing
back from bodily overture.
Mr. Bert looked on with all the bliss
of an ancient interpreter. He could follow out
the level of the vein of each, as no one may do except
a gentleman, perhaps, who has turned himself deliberately
into a “common man.” Bert had done
his utmost toward this end; but the process is difficult
when voluntary.
“I think it is time,”
he now said, firmly, to the unshackled and triumphant
Pet, “for Lancelot Yordas Carnaby to explain
what has brought him into such humble quarters, and
induced him to turn eavesdropper; which was not considered
(at least in my young days) altogether the part of
a gentleman.”
The youth had not seen quite enough
of the world to be pat with a fertile lie as yet;
especially under such searching eyes. However,
he did as much as could be well expected.
“I was just looking over my
property,” he said, “and I thought I heard
somebody cutting down my timber. I came to see
who it was, and I heard people talking, and before
I could ask them about it, I heard myself abused disgracefully;
and that was more than I could stand.”
“We must take it for granted
that a brave young gentleman of your position would
tell no falsehood. You assure us, on your honor,
that you heard no more?”
“Well, I heard voices, sir.
But nothing to understand, or make head or tail of.”
There was some truth in this; for young Lancelot had
not the least idea who “Sir Duncan” was.
His mother and aunt had kept him wholly in the dark
as to any lost uncle in India. “I should
like to know what it was,” he added, “if
it has anything to do with me.”
This was a very clever hit of his;
and it made the old gentleman believe him altogether.
“All in good time, my young
friend,” he answered, even with a smile of some
pity for the youth. “But you are scarcely
old enough for business questions, although so keen
about your timber. Now after abusing you so disgracefully,
as I admit that my friend here has done, and after
roping your pugnacious hands, as I myself was obliged
to do, we never can launch you upon the moor, in such
weather as this, without some food. You are not
very strong, and you have overdone yourself. Let
us go to the house, and have something.”
Jack of the Smithies showed alacrity
at this, as nearly all old soldiers must; but Pet
was much oppressed with care, and the intellect in
his breast diverged into sore distraction of anxious
thought. Whether should he draw the keen sword
of assurance, put aside the others, and see Insie,
or whether should he start with best foot foremost,
scurry up the hill, and avoid the axe of Maunder?
Pallas counselled this course, and Aphrodite that;
and the latter prevailed, as she always used to do,
until she produced the present dry-cut generation.
Lancelot bowed to the gentleman of
the gill, and followed him along the track of grit,
which set his little pearly teeth on edge; while Jack
of the Smithies led, and formed, the rear-guard.
“This is coming now to something very queer,”
thought Pet; “after all, it might have been
better for me to take my chance with the hatchet man.”
Brown dusk was ripely settling down
among the mossy apple-trees, and the leafless alders
of the brook, and the russet and yellow memories of
late autumn lingering in the glen, while the peaky
little freaks of snow, and the cold sighs of the wind,
suggested fireside and comfort. Mr. Bert threw
open his cottage door, and bowing as to a welcome guest,
invited Pet to enter. No passage, no cold entrance
hall, demanded scrapes of ceremony; but here was the
parlor, and the feeding-place, and the warm dance
of the fire-glow. Logs that meant to have a merry
time, and spread a cheerful noise abroad, ere ever
they turned to embers, were snorting forth the pointed
flames, and spitting soft protests of sap. And
before them stood, with eyes more bright than any
flash of fire-light, intent upon rich simmering scents,
a lovely form, a grace of dainties — oh, a
goddess certainly!
“Master Carnaby,” said
the host, “allow me, sir, the honor to present
my daughter to you, Insie darling, this is Mr. Lancelot
Yordas Carnaby. Make him a pretty courtesy.”
Insie turned round with a rosy blush,
brighter than the brightest fire-wood, and tried to
look at Pet as if she had never even dreamed of such
a being. Pet drew hard upon his heart, and stood
bewildered, tranced, and dazzled. He had never
seen Insie in-doors before, which makes a great difference
in a girl; and the vision was too bright for him.
For here, at her own hearth, she looked
so gentle, sweet, and lovely. No longer wild
and shy, or gayly mischievous and watchful, but calm-eyed,
firm-lipped, gravely courteous; intent upon her father’s
face, and banishing not into shadow so much as absolute
nullity any one who dreamed that he ever filled a
pitcher for her, or fed her with grouse and partridge,
and committed the incredible atrocity of kissing her.
Lancelot ceased to believe it possible
that he ever could have done such a thing as that,
while he saw how she never would see him at all, or
talk in the voice that he had been accustomed to, or
even toss her head in the style he had admired, when
she tried to pretend to make light of him. If
she would only make light of him now, he would be well
contented, and say to himself that she did it on purpose,
for fear of the opposite extreme. But the worst
of it was that she had quite forgotten, beyond blink
of inquiry or gleam of hope, that ever in her life
she had set eyes on a youth of such perfect insignificance
before.
“My friend, you ought to be
hungry,” said Bert of the Gill, as he was proud
to call himself; “after your exploit you should
be fed. Your vanquished foe will sit next to
you. Insie, you are harassed in mind by the countenance
of our old friend Master John Smithies. He has
met with a little mishap — never mind — the
rising generation is quick of temper. A soldier
respects his victor; it is a beautiful arrangement
of Providence; otherwise wars would never cease.
Now give our two guests a good dish of the best, piping
hot, and of good meaty fibre. We will have our
own supper by-and-by, when Maunder comes home, and
your mother is ready. Gentlemen, fall to; you
have far to go, and the moors are bad after night-fall.”
Lancelot, proudly as he stood upon
his rank, saw fit to make no objection. Not only
did his inner man cry, “Feed, even though a common
man feed with thee,” but his mind was under the
influence of a stronger one, which scorned such stuff.
Moreover, Insie, for the first time, gave him a glance,
demure but imperative, which meant, “Obey my
father, sir.”
He obeyed, and was rewarded; for the
beautiful girl came round him so, to hand whatever
he wanted, and seemed to feel so sweetly for him in
his strange position, that he scarcely knew what he
was eating, only that it savored of rich rare love,
and came from the loveliest creature in the world.
In stern fact, it came from the head of a sheep; but
neither jaws nor teeth were seen. Upon one occasion
he was almost sure that a curl of Insie’s lovely
hair fell upon the back of his stooping neck; he could
scarcely keep himself from jumping up; and he whispered,
very softly, when the old man was away, “Oh,
if you would only do that again!” But his darling
made manifest that this was a mistake, and applied
herself sedulously to the one-armed Jack.
Jack of the Smithies was a trencherman
of the very first order, and being well wedded (with
a promise already of young soldiers to come), it behooved
him to fill all his holes away from home, and spare
his own cupboard for the sake of Mistress Smithies.
He perceived the duty, and performed it, according
to the discipline of the British army.
But Insie was fretting in the conscience
of her heart to get the young Lancelot fed and dismissed
before the return of her great wild brother.
Not that he would hurt their guest, though unwelcome;
or even show any sort of rudeness to him; but more
than ever now, since she heard of Pet’s furious
onslaught upon the old soldier — which made
her begin to respect him a little — she longed
to prevent any meeting between this gallant and the
rough Maunder. And that anxiety led her to look
at Pet with a melancholy kindness. Then Jack
of the Smithies cut things short.
“Off’s the word,”
he said, “if ever I expects to see home afore
daylight. All of these moors is known to me, and
many’s the time I have tracked them all in sleep,
when the round world was betwixt us. But without
any moon it is hard to do ’em waking; and the
loss of my arm sends me crooked in the dark.
And as for young folk, they be all abroad to once.
With your leave, Master Bert, I’ll be off immediate,
after getting all I wants, as the manner of the world
is. My good missus will be wondering what is
come of me.”
“You have spoken well,”
his host replied; “and I think we shall have
a heavy fall to-night. But this young gentleman
must not go home alone. He is not robust, and
the way is long and rough. I have seen him shivering
several times. I will fetch my staff, and march
with him.”
“No, sir, I will not have such
a thing done,” the veteran answered, sturdily.
“If the young gentleman is a gentleman, he will
not be afraid for me to take him home, in spite of
what he hath done to me. Speak up, young man,
are you frightened of me?”
“Not if you are not afraid of
me,” said Pet, who had now forgotten all about
that Maunder, and only longed to stay where he was,
and set up a delicious little series of glances.
For the room, and the light, and the tenor of the
place, began more and more to suit such uses.
And most and best of all, his Insie was very thankful
to him for his good behavior; and he scarcely could
believe that she wanted him to go. To go, however,
was his destiny; and when he had made a highly laudable
and far-away salute, it happened — in the
shift of people, and of light, and clothing, which
goes on so much in the winter-time — that
a little hand came into his, and rose to his lips,
with ground of action, not for assault and battery,
but simply for assumpsit.