Mrs. Jenny Rusker, who was half dead
with fear of an expose of her part in this
unlucky love-affair, was additionally prostrated by
the dire reversal of all her hopes by Samson Mountain’s
ultimatum. Mrs. Mountain, with the aid of a female
servant, supported Julia upstairs, and Samson smoked
on stolidly, taking no note whatever of the visitor’s
presence. Still in doubt of what Samson might
or might not know, and fearing almost to breathe,
lest any reminder of her presence should call down
his wrath upon her, she listened to the tramping and
the muffled noises overhead until they ceased, and
then, gathering courage from his continued apathy,
slipped from the room and left the house.
She got home and went to bed and passed
an interminable night in tossing to and fro, and bewailing
the untoward fate of the two children. Dawn came
at last, though it had seemed as if it never would
break again, and, for the first time for many a year,
the first gleam of sunlight saw her dressed and downstairs.
She felt feverous and ill, and having brewed for herself
a huge jorum of tansy tea, sat down over this inspiring
beverage, and tried to pull her scattered wits together
and think out some way of untangling the skein of
difficulty with which she had to deal. The danger
was pressing, and if she had been herself the poor
lovesick girl who lay a mile away, stifling her sobs
lest they should reach her father’s ears, and
vainly calling on her lover’s name, she would
scarcely have been more miserable.
One thing was clear. Dick must
be warned, and his journey to London postponed by
some device. He might lie hidden for a day or
two in Birmingham, and Julia be smuggled there and
secretly married. It was no time for half measures,
and whatever was done should be done quickly and decisively.
At this idea, at once romantic and practical, Mrs.
Jenny’s spirits revived.
’Samson ’ll disown Julia,
I know. Her ‘ll never see a penny o’
his money. An’ I doubt as Abel Reddy ‘ll
do the same wi’ Dick. He’s just as
hard and bitter as th’ other, on’y quieter
wi’ it. Well, they shan’t want while
I’m alive, nor after my death neither, and Dick
ud make his own way with nobody’s help.
I’ll write to him, and find somebody to take
the letter. I won’t go myself, at this hour
o’ the day.’
She concocted a letter and sealed
it, and putting on her bonnet sallied out to find
a messenger. Fate was so far propitious that scarce
a hundred yards from her door she met Ichabod Bubb,
bound for his morning’s work at Perry Hall Farm.
Ichabod was bent and gnarled and twisted now, stiff
in all his joints and slow of movement, but his quaint
visage bore the same look of uncertain and rather wistful
humour which had marked it in earlier times.
‘Morning, mum,’ he said,
with a stiff-necked nod at Mrs. Jenny.
‘Good-mornin’, Mr. Bubb,’
said the old lady. Ichabod beamed at this sudden
and unexpected ceremonial of title, and straightened
his back.
’You ‘m afoot early, mum.’
’Why, yes. But it’s
such a beautiful morning; it’s a shaame to lie
abed a time like this.’
‘So many folks, so many ways
o’ thinkin’,’ said the ancient one;
’not as it’s a sin as I often commits,
nayther, ’cos why, I don’t get the chance.’
‘I’ve got a bit o’
business as I want done, Mr. Bubb,’ said Mrs.
Busker, ‘if ye don’t mind earnin’
a shillin’.’
‘Why,’ returned Ichabod,
’I don’t know as I’ve got any, not
to say rewted, objection to makin’ a shillin’.’
‘You’re goin’ to
the farm?’ Ichabod nodded. ’Then I
want you to take this note to Mr. Richard. But
mind, you must get it to him private. Nobody
else must know. D’you understand?’
‘I’m all theer, missus,’ responded
Ichabod.
‘Then there’s the note,
an’ there’s the shillin’. An’
if you’re back in two hours you shall have a
pint o’ beer.’ Ichabod took the note
and the shilling, and clattered off with a ludicrous
show of despatch, and the old lady returned to her
sitting-room to await the result of his message.
It came in less than the appointed time, and disappointed
her terribly. Ichabod had ascertained that Dick
had started half an hour before his arrival at the
farm for Birmingham, and would only return to-morrow
night to sleep and take away his luggage on the following
morning.
‘And you come to me w’
a message like that, y’ ode gone-off!’
said the exasperated old woman. ‘You might
ha’ caught him up i’ the time as you’ve
wasted comin’ back here.’
‘Caught him up,’ said
Ichabod, with a glance at his legs. ’Yis,
likely, like a cow might ketch a race-hoss. I’m
a gay fine figure, missus, to ketch up the best walker
i’ the country-side.’
Mrs. Jenny was a woman, and therefore
to offer her reason as an antidote to unreasoning
anger was merely to heap fuel on flame.
‘Ah!’ she said, reasonably
enraged with the whole masculine half of her species,’
you’re like the rest on ’em.’
’Then I’m sorry for the
rest on ’em,’ said Ichabod, ’whoever
they may be.’ Here Mrs. Jenny shut the
door upon him, leaving him in the street, and retired
to her sitting-room. But with beer to be gained
by boldness, Ichabod was leonine in courage.
He knocked, and the summons brought the old lady to
the door again. Ichabod spoke no word, but writhed
his twisted features into a grin which expressed at
once humorous deprecation and expectancy, and rabbed
the back of his veiny hand across his bristly lips.
‘Go round to the brewus,’
said Mrs. Jenny; ’you’ll find the maid
there. It’s all you’re fit for, ye
guzzlin’ old idiot.’
Ichabod retired, elate.
’Her tongue’s a stinger;
but, Lord bless thee, Ichabod, her bark’s a
long sight worse than her bite. An’ her
beer’s main good.’
Mrs. Jenny, meanwhile, retired to
the sitting-room, and there sat immersed in gloom.
Things looked black for her young proteges, and fate
was against them. With that curious interest in
familiar trifles which comes with any fit of hopelessness
or despondency, she sat looking at the furniture of
the room and the pictures which decorated the walls.
Among these latter was a work of her own hands, her
masterpiece, a reproduction in coloured wool of a
German engraving of the last scene of Romeo and
Juliet. There was a pea-green Capulet
paralytically embracing a sky-blue Montague in the
foreground, with a dissolving view of impossibly-constructed
servitors of both houses and the County Paris, with
six strongly accented bridges to his nose and a worsted
tear upon his cheek, in the background. Under
this production was worked in white, upon a black
ground, the legend which Mrs. Rusker mournfully repeated
as she gazed on it-
’For never was
a story of more woe,
Than this of Juliet
and her Romeo’;
and as she spoke the words an inspiration
flashed into her mind. She had her plan.
The new-born idea so possessed her
that she could not sit or rest. It drove her
out, as the gad-fly drove lo, to devious wanderings
in the neighbouring lanes, and as she walked and walked,
finding some little ease in the unusual and incessant
exercise, she drew nearer and nearer to the Mountain
Farm. As she paused on a little eminence and looked
towards it, the distant church bell struck clear across
the intervening fields, proclaiming nine o’clock.
‘Thank the Lord,’ said
the old woman. ’I can go now. I dussent
go too early. They might suspect.’
She made straight for the house, and
found Mrs. Mountain alone. Samson was afield,
and in answer to Mrs. Busker’s inquiries regarding
Julia, Mrs. Mountain tearfully informed her that the
poor girl was too ill to come downstairs, and had
not eaten a crumb of the tempting breakfast prepared
and sent to her room for her. Mrs. Mountain was
voluble in condemnation of her husband’s lack
of wit in his announcement of the matrimonial scheme
he had formed for the girl, and Mrs. Jenny was fluent
and honest in sympathy. Might she see the girl?
Julia was fond of her, and her counsels might bring
some comfort. Mrs. Mountain yielded a ready assent,
and the old lady went up to the girl’s room,
and entering on the languid summons which followed
her knock, saw Julia seated at the window, listless,
dejected, and tearful The tears flowed even more freely
at the sight of her, and the girl sobbed on her old
friend’s breast in full abandonment to the first
great grief of her life.
‘My dear,’ said Mrs. Jenny,
when this gush of sorrow was over, ’take a bit
o’ heart. Things is rarely as bad as they
seem; an’ there’s help at hand always
if we on’y know where to look for it.’
There was more meaning, to Julia’s
thinking, in the tone in which this commonplace condolence
was delivered than in the words themselves. Mrs.
Rusker’s manner was big with mystery.
‘Now, my darlin’, I know
you ‘m a brave gal, and can act accordin’
when there’s rayson for it. I’ve
got a plan as ’ll save you yet, if on’y
you’ve got the courage.’
Julia’s clasped hands and eager
look encouraged her to proceed.
’My dear, you remember Romeo
and Juliet? You remember how Juliet got the sleepin’
draught an’ took it? ’Julia’s
look was one of wonder, pure and simple, now.
‘That’s my plan, my dear, an’ the
Dudley Divil can do it for us, if on’y you’ll
ha’ the courage to tek it. Not as I
mean as you need be buried afore Dick comes to you.
We shouldn’t go as far as that. But I’ll
get the stuff, an’ it’ll send you to sleep,
an’ they’ll think as you’re dead,
an’ then I’ll tell ’em how you an’
Dick loved each other so’s you couldn’t
bear to part wi’ him, an’ the fear of it’s
killed you. That’ll soften their hard hearts,
my dear. Old Reddy knows all about it-that’s
why he’s sendin’ Dick away to London an’
I’ll get him fetched back to see the last o’
you, an’ I’ll mek your father an’
his father shaake hands, an’ then you’ll
come to, an’ after that what can they do but
marry you to Dick, an’ forget all that rubbidge
about the brook, an’ live in peace together,
as decent folk should do.’
Julia’s reception of this brilliant
scheme, which Mrs. Rusker developed with a volubility
which left no opportunity for detailed objection, was
to fall back in her chair and begin to cry anew at
the sheer hopeless absurdity of it.
‘What’s the matter wi’
the wench?’ demanded Mrs. Rusker, almost sternly.
‘Come, come,’ she continued, her brief
anger fading at the sight of Julia’s distress,
‘have a bit o’ sperrit. Now, will
you try it? Spake the word, an’ I’ll
goo to the Divil this minute.’
This wholesale self-abandonment in
the cause of love produced no effect on Julia, except
to frighten her. Mrs. Rusker argued and reasoned,
but finding her fears too obdurate to be moved by
any such means, left the house in dudgeon, whereat
poor Julia only cried the more. But Mrs. Rusker’s
confidence in her plan was unshaken, and her persistency
unchecked. She would save the silly girl against
her will, since it must be so, and half an hour after
she had crossed the Mountain threshold she was in
her trap, en route for the dwelling of the wizard.
She found that celebrity alone, and
opened fire on him at once.
‘Ruffis, I want thy help, an’
I’m willin’ to pay fur it.’
The necromancer’s fishy eye brightened.
Things were going poorly with him, the rising generation
followed newer lights unevident in his earlier days,
and his visitors were mostly of Mrs. Rusker’s
age, and were getting fewer day by day.
‘My skill’s at your service,
ma’am, such as it is,’ he answered, with
gravity.
’I want some’at as ’d
send a body to sleep-mek ’em sleep
for a long time, wi’out hurtin’ ’em.
Can you doit?’
‘Why, yis; I could do that much,
I think.’ His tone and manner intimated
vaguely how much more he could have done, and his disappointment
at the facility of his task. ‘But,’
he added prudently, ‘it’s a job as ain’t
s’ easy as you might fancy.’
Mrs. Busker laid a sovereign on the table.
‘Wilt do it for that?’ she asked.
The wizard stole a look at her. She was obviously
very much in earnest.
‘The hingredients,’ he
said, ’is hard to find, and harder to mix in
doo perportions.’
‘I must have it now, and at once,’ said
Mrs. Busker.
‘That,’ said Rufus, ‘ain’t
possible.’ Mrs. Jenny laid a second piece
of gold beside the first ‘It’s a dangerous
bisness, missus,’ he went on. ’Theer’s
noofangled laws about. ’Twas only last wik
as that young upstart, Doctor Hodges, comes an’
threatens me with persecution as a rogue an’
vagabond, a-obtainin’ money under false pertences
for practisin’ my lawful an’ necessary
art. Why, it ain’t so long since I cured
his mother o’ the rheumatiz, as is more nor he
can dew, wi’ all his drugs, an’ the pestle
an’ mortar o’er his door.’
‘You ought to know as you’re
safe wi’ me, Rufus,’ said Mrs. Rusker.
’Who should I tell? Why, I should tell
o’ myself tew, at that raate; an’ is that
likely?’
‘It’s dangerous, missus,’ repeated
the wizard.
‘Well, if yo’ won’t,
I must try them as wull,’ said Mrs. Jenny, rising
and taking up the coins.
‘I didn’t say as I wouldn’t,’
returned Rufus. ’Theer’s no call to
be so uppish But if I tek a chance like that
I expect to be paid for it.’
‘Two pound ud mek it wuth your
while to do more than that.’
‘I’ll dew it,’ said the wizard.
‘Give us the money?’
‘Wheer’s the stuff?’
’Why, it ain’t made yet.
D’you think as I can percure a precious hessence
like that all of a minute?’
‘Then mek it, an’ I’ll gie you the
money.’
‘Gi’ me a pound in advance,
an’ I’ll bring it to you.’ And
on that understanding the bargain was made, and the
time fixed for the delivery of the potion. The
intervening time was filled in by the astute wizard
journeying to a neighbouring town and procuring from
a chemist a sleeping draught, which he paid for out
of Mrs. Busker’s sovereign. He turned up
at Laburnum Cottage at the stipulated hour, handed
over the draught (having previously washed off the
chemist’s label), received his second sovereign,
and departed.
Mrs. Rusker, with the fateful bottle
in the bosom of her dress, betook herself again to
Mountain Farm. Her unfeigned interest in the patient,
and the intimacy she had so long enjoyed with the whole
family, made the house almost as free to her as was
her own, and when she took possession of Julia in
the capacity of nurse she was made welcome, and the
poor girl’s other attendants hoped much from
her ministration. Julia was undoubtedly very
ill, so ill that even Samson Mountain forbore to force
her to descend to the parlour in which Mr. Tom Raybould
nervously awaited her coming, and where, on Samson’s
return from his daughter’s chamber, the pair
sat and drank their beer together in miserable silence,
broken by spasmodic attempts at conversation regarding
crops and politics. The doctor had been called
in, and, knowing nothing of the grief which was the
poor girl’s only ailment, had been too puzzled
by the symptoms of her malady to be of any great service.
She was feverish, excited, with a furred tongue and
a hot skin. He had prescribed a mild tonic and
departed. Mrs. Jenny, intent on the execution
of her plan, gained solitary charge of her patient
by telling Mrs. Mountain that her attendance on her
daughter had already told upon her, and advising a
few hours’ rest.
‘I don’t feel very well,’
Mrs. Mountain confessed. ‘Not a wink o’
sleep have I had iver since Samson came home last
night. Nor him nayther, for the matter o’
that, though he tried to desave me by snorin’,
whinever I spoke to him; an’ as for any sympathy-well,
you know him aforetime, Jenny-I might as
well talk to that theer poker.’
Then Jenny was fluent in condolence,
and at last got the old lady out of the room.
‘When did you take your medicine
last, my dear?’ she asked the patient ‘Ain’t
it time as you had another drop?’
‘It doesn’t do me any
good,’ said the patient fretfully. She knew
better herself what was wrong with her than anybody
else could guess, and only longed passionately to
be alone and free to think and cry over her lost love
and broken hopes.
‘Why, my dear, you’ve
on’y took one dose yit,’ said Machiavel.
’You must give it time. I’ll pour
you out another.’ Her back was towards the
patient as she clattered about among the glasses on
the table with a shaking hand. She poured out
the wizard’s potion, the phial clinking against
the edge of the glass like a castanet, and her heart
beating so that she almost feared Julia would hear
it The girl at first pettishly refused the draught,
but Mrs. Jenny, in her guilty agitation, made short
work of her objections, and poured it down her throat
almost by main force.
’Maids must do as their elders
bid ’em,’ she said, as she returned the
glass to its place.
‘It doesn’t taste the same,’ moaned
the patient
‘You’re like all th’
other sick folk I iver nursed. As fall o’
fancies as you can stick,’ said Mrs. Jenny.
‘Lie quiet, and try an’ go to sleep.’
The girl lay silent, and Mrs. Jenny,
more than half wishing the whole business had never
been begun, sat and listened to her breathing.
She stirred and sighed once or twice, but after a
while lay so utterly still that the old lady ventured
to approach the bed. Julia’s face was almost
as white as her pillow, and her breath was so light
that it hardly stirred the coverlet above her bosom.
‘It’s a-workin,’ said Mrs. Rusker.