HOW CAPTAIN USSHER SUCCEEDED.
Late the next morning, Feemy and the
other girls got up; they had slept together to make
room in the house for the victorious Bob, but as Father
John had prophesied, they were all too tired to be
much inconvenienced by this. Immediately after
breakfast the car came round, and Feemy, afraid to
wish her friends good bye too affectionately lest
suspicion should be raised, and promising to come
back again in a day or two, returned to Ballycloran.
Thady was out when she got there,
but he was expected in to dinner. Her father
was glad to see her, and began assuring her that he
would do all in his power to protect her from the
evil machinations of her brother, and then again took
his grog and his pipe. She went into the kitchen,
and summoning Biddy, desired her to follow her up to
her bedroom. When there, she carefully closed
the door, and sitting down on the bed, looked in her
attendant’s face and said,
“Biddy, if I told you a secret,
you’d never betray me, would you?”
“Is it I, Miss Feemy, that’s
known you so long? in course I wouldn’t,”
and the girl pricked up her ears, and looked all anxiety.
“What is it, Miss? Shure you know
av you tould me to hould my tongue, never a word
I’d spake to any mortial about anything.”
“I know you wouldn’t,
Biddy; that’s why I’m going to tell you;
but you mustn’t whisper it to Katty, for I think
she’d be telling Thady.”
“Niver fear, Miss; sorrow a
word I’ll whisper it to any one, at all at all.”
“Well, Biddy, did you hear Captain
Ussher’s going away from this intirely?”
“What! away from Ballycloran?”
“No, but from Mohill, and from
County Leitrim altogether. He’s going a
long way off, to a place called Cashel.”
“And what for is he going there,
and you living here, Miss Feemy?”
“That’s the secret, Biddy; I’m going
with him.”
“My! and is you married in sacret,
Miss?” said the girl, coming nearer to her mistress,
and opening her eyes as wide as she could.
Feemy blushed up to the roots of her
hair, and said, “No, we’re not married
yet; we’re to be married in Dublin; we couldn’t
be married here you know, because Captain Ussher is
a Protestant.”
“Holy Mary! Miss, you’re
not a going to lave the ould religion; you’re
not a going to turn Prothesthant, is you, Miss Feemy?”
“No, Biddy; why should I turn
Protestant? but you see there’s rasons why we
couldn’t be married here; we’re to be married
in Dublin, to-morrow.”
“To-morrow!” ejaculated
Biddy; “what, is you going to-night?”
“This very evening; and now
I want you to help me, and when we’re settled,
Biddy, if you like to lave this ould place, I mane
you to come and live with us.”
“To be shure, Miss; and wouldn’t
I go the world round wid you? and why not? for it’s
you was always the kind misthress to me. But
what’ll I be doing to help you?”
And then Feemy explained to her her
plans, and began to pack up the few treasures she
could take with her, in a box small enough for Biddy
to carry; and the two kneeled down together to the
work.
Feemy’s tears dropped quickly
on the little things she was packing, and the poor
girl soon followed the example her mistress gave her.
“Ochone! ochone! Miss Feemy,
alanna, what’ll we be doing widout you?”
and she came round and began kissing her mistress’s
dress, and hands, and face, “What shall we do
widout you at all then? what will the ould man be
doing, when you’re not to the fore to mix his
punch?”
“Don’t talk that way,”
said Feemy. “Shure, won’t I be coming
back to see him when I’m married?”
“In course you will; but it’ll
be a great miss, when he and Mr. Thady finds you’re
gone. What’ll I say at all, when I come
back from seeing you off and they finds
that you are gone?”
“But you mustn’t stay
to see me off at all. When you’ve put the
box in the gig you must go on to Mrs. Mehan’s,
and when you come back you can say you’d been
down to look for something that was left the day of
Mary’s wedding; but mind, Biddy, don’t
say a word about it at Mrs. Mehan’s, and above
all, don’t mention it to Katty.”
“Not a word, Miss; niver fear:
but what’ll I be doing when you’re gone?
But I suppose it’s all for the best; may sorrow
seize him thin av he don’t make you the
good husband.”
It was then settled that Feemy’s
bonnet and shawl were to be brought down into the
sitting-room opposite the dining-room that
dinner was to be put off as late as possible that
when Larry and Thady were at their punch, Feemy was
to escape unobserved. Biddy was enjoined, when
she slipped out with the box, to leave the front door
ajar, so that her mistress could follow her without
making any noise. The girl was also to carry
down her mistress’ cloak so that she
might the easier run down the avenue.
When these things were all settled,
Biddy returned to the kitchen, big with the secret;
but she was too prudent to say or hint anything which
could create a suspicion in her colleague’s breast.
Thady came in about the usual dinner-hour,
and Feemy spoke good-humouredly to her brother more
so than she had done since the day he had desired
her not to walk with Captain Ussher. Thady himself
was less gloomy than usual, for he had been rejoiced
by hearing that the revenue officer was immediately
going to leave the country. He had only been
told it that morning at Mohill, as a secret, and he
therefore presumed that Feemy did not know it.
He thought that he would not distress her by telling
her of it now that he had better leave
her to find it out herself after he was gone; but the
reflection of the misery it would occasion her when
she did know it, gave rise to a feeling of pity for
her in his heart, which made him more inclined to
be gentle and tender to her than he had felt for a
long time.
After sitting over the fire with their
father for some time, Thady said,
“Well, Feemy, these are fashionable
hours you’ve brought with you from Drumsna.
Does Mrs. McKeon always dine as late as this?
Why it’s half past six!”
“The stupid girl forgot the
potatoes, Thady. You could have them now; but
you know, you wouldn’t eat them as hard as stones.
I’ll go and hurry her.”
“’Deed and I’m starving,”
said the father. “Why can’t we have
dinner then, Feemy dear? Why won’t they
bring dinner in?”
And Feemy went out, not to hurry them,
but to cause grounds for fresh delay. At last,
a little after seven, she allowed dinner to go in,
and following it herself, she sat down and made as
good a meal as she could, and endeavoured to answer
Thady’s questions about the races and the ball
with some appearance of having taken interest, at any
rate in the latter. If she did not altogether
succeed, the attempt was not so futile as to betray
her; and the dinner passed over, and the hot water
came in, without anything arising especially to excite
her alarm. At last she heard the front door open,
and she listened with apprehension to every creak
the rusty hinges made as Biddy vainly endeavoured
to close it without a noise; but the sounds, which,
in her fear, seemed so loud and remarkable to her,
attracted no notice from her father or brother.
Then she mixed their punch. Had Thady been looking
at her he might have seen a tear drop into the tumbler
as she handed it to him; but his eyes were on the fireplace,
and she slipped out of the room without her tell-tale
face having been observed.
It was now, as she calculated, about
the time that she should start; and with trembling
hands she tied on her bonnet. Having thrown her
shawl over her shivering shoulders, she opened her
book upon the table with a handkerchief upon it placed
her chair by the fire, and leaving the candle alight,
slowly crept through the hall-door, down the front
steps, and into the avenue leading to the road.
She shuddered when she found herself alone in the
cold dark air; but soon plucking up her courage, she
ran down as quickly as she could to the spot where
the old gate always stood open, and leaning against
the post, listened intently for the sound of the gig
wheels. She stood there, listening for three
or four minutes, which seemed to her to be an hour,
and then getting cold, she thought she’d walk
on to meet Ussher as he had directed her; but before
she had gone a dozen yards the darkness frightened
her, and she returned. As soon as she had again
reached the gateway she heard a man’s footstep
on the road a little above; and still more frightened
at this, she ran back the avenue towards the house
till the footsteps had passed the gate. She did
not, however, dare again to stand in sight of the road,
though it was so dark, that no one passing could have
seen her if she were a few yards up the avenue; so
she sat down on the stump of a tree that had been
lately felled, and determined to wait till she heard
the sound of the gig.
There she remained for what seemed
to her a cruelly long time; she became so cold that
she could hardly feel the ground beneath her feet;
and her teeth shook in her head as she sat there alone
in the cold night air of an October night, with no
warmer wrapping than a slight shawl thrown over her
shoulders. There she sat, listening for every
sound longing to catch the rattle of the
wheels that were to carry her away fancying
every moment that she heard footsteps approaching,
and dreading lest the awful creak of the house-door
opening should reach her ears.
She could not conceive why Ussher
did not come she had absolutely been there
half an hour, and she thought it must be past ten she
had long been crying, and was now really suffering
with bodily pain from cold and fright; and then the
whole of Ussher’s conduct to her since that
horrid morning passed through her mind she
saw things now in their true light, which had never
struck her so before. What would she not have
given to have been safe again at Mrs. McKeon’s;
to have been in her own room, of which she could still
see the light through the window; in fact, to be anywhere
but where she was? She did not dare, however,
to return to the house, or even again to walk down
the road. Poor, unhappy Feemy! she already felt
the wretched fruits of her obstinacy and her pride.
At last she absolutely heard the front-door
pushed open, and could plainly see a man’s figure
standing on the threshold. It must be Thady!
They had discovered her departure, and he was already
coming to drag her back! She heard his feet descending
the hall steps; but they were as slow and as deliberate
as usual; and she could perceive that, instead of
coming down the avenue, he turned towards the stables.
This was a slight relief to her it was evident
she was not yet missed; but she was dreadfully cold,
and what was she to do if Thady heard the noise of
the gig, and perceived that it had stopped at their
gate?
Ussher had driven over to Mohill early
in the morning, and had gotten everything ready for
his departure in the manner he had proposed; but when
the time for starting came, he had been detained by
business connected with his official duties, and it
was eight o’clock before he was able to bid
adieu to the interesting town of Mohill. He had
then, at the risk of his own neck, driven off as fast
as Fred Brown’s broken-knee’d horse could
take him, and was proceeding at a gallop towards Ballycloran,
when he was stopped near Mrs. Mehan’s well-known
shop by Biddy, who was standing by the road-side opposite.
He stopped the horse as quick as he
could, and Biddy came running to him with Feemy’s
bundle.
“Is that yer honer, at last?
Glory be to God! but I thought you wor niver coming.
The misthress ’ll be perished with the could.”
“Never mind hurry give
me what you’ve got!” And Biddy handed in
the bundle and cloak, and Ussher again drove on.
“Musha then, but he’s
a niggardly baste!” soliloquised Biddy, “not
to give me the sign of a bit of money, after waiting
there for him these two hours by the road-side, and
me with his sacret and all, that could ruin him
if I chose to spake the word, only I wouldn’t
for Miss Feemy’s sake. But maybe it was
the hurry and all that made him be forgitting, for
he was niver the man for a mane action. I wish
he may trate her well, that’s all; for he’s
a hard man, and it’s bad for her to be leaving
the ould place without the priest’s blessing.”
Ussher was at the gateway; but when
he got there, he could not see Feemy. He waited
about a minute, and then whistled a minute
more, and he whistled again. What should he do?
It would be so foolish now for him to go without her!
He knew the horse was steady and would stand; so he
got out and walked up the avenue till he saw the figure
of Feemy, still sitting on the root of the tree where
we left her. There was a light colour in her
shawl, and the little white collar round her neck
enabled him to see her at some distance; and she saw,
or at any rate heard him, but she neither moved to
or from him.
She had caught, some time since, the
sound of the gig wheels; but just as she did so, she
again saw the figure of Thady as he came round from
the stables; and he evidently had heard it also, for
he stood still on the open space before the house.
He was smoking, for she caught the smell of the tobacco,
and she plainly heard the stones on the pathway rattle
as he now and then struck them with the stick in his
hand. He didn’t move towards her; but there
he stood, as if determined to ascertain whether the
vehicle which he must have heard, would pass along
the road by the gate.
Then the sound ceased. It was
when Biddy was putting in it the cloak and bundle,
and again it continued closer and closer. The
road came round the little shrubbery through which
the avenue passed; the gig was therefore at one time
even nearer to Feemy than it would be when it stopped
at the avenue gate; and when it passed this place,
she fancied she could hear Ussher moving in his seat.
She did not dare to stir, however, for there still
stood Thady, listening like herself to the sounds
within forty yards of her; and had she risen he must
have seen her.
And now the gig stopped at the avenue
gate. Feemy was all but fainting; what with the
cold and her former fear, and the dreadful position
in which she found herself, she could not have moved
if she had tried; she just preserved her senses sufficiently
to torture her, and that was all. Plainly she
heard her lover whistle; and plainly Thady heard it
too, for he kept his stick completely still, and took
the pipe from his mouth: then the second whistle then
she heard Ussher’s foot on the ground heard
him approaching, and saw his figure draw nearer; in
vain she endeavoured to make signs to him, in vain
she thought she whispered, “keep back;”
for when she tried to speak, the words would not come.
On he came till he was close to her, and in a low
voice he said,
“Feemy, is that you? why don’t
you come? what are you here for?” and he put
down his hand to raise her. Feemy tried to rise
and whisper something, but she was unable, and when
Ussher stooped and absolutely lifted her from her
seat, she had really fainted. “Come, Feemy,”
said he, still unaware of Thady being near, “come;
this is nonsense hurry, there’s a
love. Come, Feemy, stand, can’t you?”
When Thady had first come out of the
house, it had merely been for the purpose of going
into the stable, as was his practice, to see the two
farm horses fed; as he returned, he caught the sound
of Ussher’s gig; but it was more for the purpose
of smoking his pipe in the open air than from any
curiosity that he lingered out of doors. When,
however, the vehicle stopped at Ballycloran gate, and
he heard the whistle twice repeated, his interest
was excited, and he thought that something was not
right. He then heard Ussher’s footsteps
up the avenue, and he fancied he could hear him speak;
but he had no idea who he was; nor had he the slightest
suspicion that his sister was so near him.
But when Ussher stopped, Thady gently
came down the avenue unperceived; he saw him stoop,
and lift something in his arms, but still up to this
time he had not recognised the voice. It was Thady’s
idea that something had been stolen from the yard,
which the thief was now removing, under cover of the
darkness. By degrees, as he got nearer, he perceived
it was a woman’s form that the man was half
dragging, half carrying, and then he heard Ussher’s
voice say loudly, and somewhat angrily, “This
is d d nonsense, Feemy! you know
you must come now.”
These were the last words he ever
uttered. Thady was soon close to him, and with
the heavy stick he always carried in his hand, he
struck him violently upon the head. Ussher, when
he had heard the footsteps immediately behind him,
dropped Feemy, who was still insensible, upon the
path; but he could not do so quick enough to prevent
the stunning blow which brought him on his knees.
His hat partially saved him, and he was on the point
of rising, when Thady again struck him with all his
power; this time the heavy bludgeon came down on his
bare temple, and the young man fell, never to rise
again. He neither moved nor groaned; the force
of the blow, and the great weight of the stick falling
on his uncovered head as he was rising, had shattered
his brains, and he lay as dead as though he had been
struck down by a thunder-bolt from heaven.
Though it was so dark that Thady could
not see the blood he had shed, or watch how immovable
was the body of the man he had attacked, still he
knew that Ussher was no more. He had felt the
skull give way beneath the stroke; he had heard the
body fall heavily on the earth, and he was sure his
enemy was dead.
At first he felt completely paralysed,
and unable to do anything; but he was soon aroused
by a long sigh from poor Feemy. The cold had
revived her, and she now regained her senses.
Thady threw his stick upon the ground, and stooping
to lift her up, said,
“Oh! Feemy, Feemy, what have you brought
upon me!”
When she recognised her brother’s
voice, and found that she was in his arms, she said,
“Where am I, Thady? What
have you done with him? Where is he?”
“Never mind now. He’s gone come
to the house.”
“Gone! he’s
not gone; don’t I know he would not go without
me?” and then escaping from her brother’s
arms, she screamed, “Myles, Myles! what
have you done with him? I’ll not stir with
you till you tell me where he is!” and then
the poor girl shuddered, and added, “Oh!
I’m cold, so miserably cold!”
“Come to the house with me,
Feemy; this is no place for you now.”
“I’ll not go with you,
Thady. It’s no use, for you shan’t
make me; tell me what you’ve done with him I’ll
go nowhere without him.”
Thady paused a minute, thinking what
he’d say, and then replied: “You’ll
never go with him now, Feemy, for Captain Ussher is
dead!”
Feemy only repeated the last word
after her brother, and again fell insensible on the
ground.
Thady at length succeeded in getting
her to the house; and pushing open the front door,
which was still unlatched, with his foot, took her
into her own room on the left hand side of the passage,
and deposited her still insensible on the sofa.
He then went into the kitchen, and sent Katty to her
assistance.
Pat Brady was sitting over the kitchen
fire, smoking. Though this man was still hanging
about the place, and had not come to an actual rupture
with his master, still there had been no cordiality
or confidence between them since Brady had failed
to induce Thady to keep his appointment at the widow
Mulready’s; and for the last two days not even
a single word had passed between them. Now, however,
there was no one else but Pat about the place, and
Thady felt that he must tell some one of the deed
that he had done. It would be useless to consult
his father; his sister was already insensible; the
two girls would be worse than useless; besides, he
could not now conceal the deed; he could not leave
the body to lie there on the road.
“Brady,” said he, “come
out; I want to spake to you. Is there a lanthern
in the place at all?”
“No, Mr. Thady, there is not,”
said he, without moving; “what is it you want
to-night?”
“Come out, and bring a lighted candle, if you
can.”
Brady now saw from his master’s
pale face, and fear-struck expression, that something
extraordinary had happened, and he followed him with
a candle under his hat; but the precaution was useless,
the wind blew it out at once.
“Pat,” said Thady, as
soon as the two were out before the front door; “Pat,”
and he didn’t know how to pronounce the thing
he wished to tell.
“Good God! Mr. Thady, what’s
the matther? has anything happened the owld man?”
“What owld man?”
“Your father.”
“No, nothing’s happened him; but but
Captain Ussher is dead!”
“Gracious glory no!
why he was laving this for good and all this night.
And how did he die?” and he whispered
in his master’s ear “did the
boys do for him?”
“I killed him by myself,” answered Thady,
in a whisper.
“You killed him, Mr. Thady ah! now, you’re
joking.”
“Stop!” said Thady for
they were now in the avenue “joking
or not, his body is somewhere here; and
he had Feemy here, dragging her along the road, and
I struck him with my stick across the head, and now
they’ll say I’ve murdhered him.”
Brady soon touched the body with his
foot; and the two raised it together, and put it off
the path on the grass, and then held a council together,
as to what steps had better be taken.
Brady, after his first surprise and
awe at hearing of Ussher’s death was over, spoke
of it very unconcernedly, and rather as a good thing
done than otherwise. He recommended his master
to get out of the way; he advised him at once to go
down to Drumleesh and find out Joe Reynolds; he assured
Thady that the man would even now be willing to befriend
him and get him out of harm’s way. He told
him that Reynolds and others had places up in the
mountains where he might lie concealed, and where
the police would never be able to find him; and that
if he only got out of the way for a time, it might
probably not be found murder by the Coroner, and that
in that case he could return quietly to Ballycloran.
Thady listened sadly to Brady’s
advice, but he did not know what better to propose
to himself. He remembered the last words which
Reynolds had said to him, and he made up his mind to
go down at once to Corney Dolan’s, who was a
tenant of his own, and from him find out where Reynolds
was.
“But, Pat,” said Thady,
when he had made up his mind to the line of conduct
he meant to pursue, “what shall we do with the
man’s body? We can’t let it lie here.
As I trust in God, I had no thoughts to kill him!
and I would not run away, and lave the body here, as
though I’d murdhered him.”
“Jist lay him asy among the
trees, Mr. Thady, till you’re out of the counthry;
and then I’ll find it, by accident
in course, and get the police to carry it off.
Thim fellows is paid for sich work.”
“No, Pat; that wouldn’t
do at all. I won’t have them say I hid the
body; every one ’ll know ’twas I did it;
mind, I don’t ask you to tell a lie about it;
and I’ll not have it left here, as though I’d
run away the moment afther I struck him. We must
take him into the house, Brady.”
“Into the house, yer honer!
not a foot of it! why, you’d have Miss Feemy
in fits; and the owld man’d be worse still, wid
all thim fellows coming from Carrick and sitting on
the body, discoursing whether it wor to be murdher
or not.”
“Well, then; we’ll take it to Mrs. Mehan’s.”
“Av you do, Mr. Thady,
the country ’ll have it all in no time.
Howsomever, they must take it there if you choose,
as it’s a public; but you’d better lave
it where it is, and let me send it down by and by jist
to give you an hour’s start or so.”
This Thady absolutely refused, stating
that he would not leave the body till he had seen
it deposited in some decent and proper place; and
the two men took it up between them and carried it
away, meaning to take it to Mrs. Mehan’s.
But at the avenue gate they found Fred Brown’s
horse and gig, exactly where Ussher had left it, excepting
that the horse was leisurely employed in browsing the
grass from the ditch side.
Brady soon recognised both the horse
and gig as belonging to Brown Hall; and he then proposed
putting the body of its former occupant in it, and
driving it to the station of the police at Carrick-on-Shannon,
and restoring at the same time the horse and gig to
its proper owner at Brown Hall. To this scheme
Thady at last agreed; but he made the man promise
him, that when he got to the police at Carrick he
would tell them that he, Thady, had desired him to
do so; and that, instead of running away, he had not
left the body till he had seen it put into the vehicle,
to be carried into Carrick-on-Shannon. And with
these injunctions Brady departed with his charge.