Mrs. Jenny’s simple faith in
the talents of Rufus Smith underwent a severe trial
during the ensuing night. She had left Julia still
sleeping, and the memory of the last glance she had
bestowed upon the white face in the light of the carefully-shaded
candle haunted her all night, and roused a foreboding
too dismal to be expressed, or even formulated in
definite thought. The matchmaker lay and trembled
all night at that terrible idea, and again the pale-faced
dawn visited a sleepless pillow, and found her haggard
with anxiety and lack of sleep. Juliet’s
query to the Friar had been, ’What if the potion
should not work?’ but Mrs. Jenny’s terrified
inquiry of her own soul was, ’What if it had
worked too well?’ What if it had killed Julia
in very deed? It was too horrible to happen,
Mrs. Jenny said to herself. Too horrible to think
of. But, if it had happened, she would have nothing
else to think of all her life, and the fancy drove
her nearly mad.
She was dressed and afoot even earlier
than on the preceding morning. She crept out
and encircled the Mountain Farm in a radius of a mile
or thereabouts, looking anxiously towards it at every
step, as if its silent walls might speak comfort or
confirm her fears, even at that distance. The
house looked peaceful enough amid its surrounding trees
under the tranquilly broadening light of dawn, but
Mrs. Rusker knew how ghastly white the face of the
poor child she loved as her own might look in that
roseate glow. Presently a thin line of smoke curled
from a chimney on the noiseless air. The farm
was waking to its daily round of life. A burly
figure on horseback came towards her as she stood on
a little eminence. She waited long enough to
identify Samson Mountain, and hid among the ferns
and bushes until the horse’s hoof-beats had
clattered swiftly by on the stony road below her, and
faded in the distance.
Time crept on, slow but inexorable.
She longed, as she had never longed before for anything,
for the courage to go to the farmhouse and ask tidings
of Julia. But her fear was greater than her longing,
and she roamed at random in a circle, never losing
sight of the house, but not daring to approach it
or be seen from its windows. She dreaded what
might be the news to greet her there. She feared
her own face, with its haggard lines of sleeplessness
and anxious watching. At last, from the very
depths of her misery, she plucked the heart of despairing
hope, and made for the farm. The farm labourers
and country folk she met stared after her. Even
their bovine understandings were troubled by her scared
face. She scarcely saw them, or anything but the
farmhouse, which drew her now with an influence as
strong as its repulsion had been an hour ago.
She entered the house by the back door, and made straight
for the sitting-room. Mrs. Mountain was there,
arranging a tray, on which were tea and jam and other
homely luxuries. She wore her ordinary look of
placid contentment, and at the sight of her quiet face
Mrs. Rusker dropped panting, with a vague unformulated
feeling of relief, into a chair.
‘Sakes alive! Whativer
is the matter?’ demanded Mrs. Mountain.
‘Julia!’ panted the visitor. ‘How’s
Julia?’
‘Why,’ said Mrs. Mountain, ‘how
should her be?’
‘Is she awake yet?’ asked Mrs. Jenny,
more calmly.
‘No. Her was sleepin’
when I seed her, jist for a minute, a hour ago.
I’m jist goin’ upstairs wi’ some
breakfast for her. Well, I declare, yo’
look as pale as a ghost. What’s the matter
with you?’
‘Oh, I’ve passed a miserable
night,’ said Mrs. Jenny, in unconscious quotation
from her favourite poet. ‘I couldn’t
sleep a-thinkin’ o’ Julia.’
‘Well, then, you do look poorly,’
said her hostess, with all her motherly heart warmed
by this solicitude for her daughter. ’Why,
theer’s no cause to fret i’ that way.
To be sure, Samson might ha’ knowed better than
to blunder such a thing as that right out, but, then,
he’s a man, and that’d account for a’most
anything. Married life might teach ’em
better, you’d think, and yet after nigh on forty
year on it he knows no more about women folk than
any bachelor i’ Barfield. Theer, tek
your bonnet off, an’ I’ll gi’ ye
a cup o’ tay, an’ then you can goo upstairs
wi’ me and see the wench.’
Mrs. Jenny gratefully accepted the
proffered tea, and, having drunk it, much to her inward
refreshment, accompanied Mrs. Mountain upstairs.
As the latter had said, the girl was sleeping still,
and Mrs. Busker saw that her position had not changed
by a hair’s breadth. She lay like a carven
statue, her face marble white in the clear morning
light.
‘I’m a’most doubtful
about wakin’ her,’ said her mother.
’Theer’s no doubt as Samson gi’en
her a shock, an’ sleep’s good for her.
But her’s had welly fifteen hours of it now,
if she’s been asleep all the tima Julia, my
love,’ she said softly, almost in the sleeper’s
ear. ’My sakes, how pale her is. Jenny!
come here!’
They both bent above her. Mrs.
Rusker’s heart was beating like a muffled drum,
and seemed, to her own ears, to fill the house with
its pulsation.
‘Julia!’ said Mrs. Mountain
again, in a louder voice, and shook the girl with
a tremulous hand, ‘Julia!’
The white eyelids did not even stir.
‘My blessid! Julia!
Don’t skeer a body i’ this way!’
She shook the girl again. ‘Jenny! whativer’s
come to the silly wench?’
Mrs. Jenny was more frightened, and
with better reason, than her companion. Julia’s
marble pallor, and the awful stillness of her form-the
keenest glance could not detect a quiver in the face
or a heave of the bosom-almost stilled
that exigent pulse within her own breast with a sudden
anguish of despair.
‘Oh, Jenny, she’s a-dyin’!’
Mrs. Mountain’s scream rang
through the house, and startled every soul within
it, except that marble figure on the bed. Hurried
steps came up the stairs, the heavy tread of a man,
the light patter of women’s feet, and the room
filled as if by magic.
‘Fetch a doctor,’ screamed Mrs. Jenny;
‘Julia’s a-dyin’!’
Samson Mountain stood for one moment
with his hands aloft and his eyes glaring at his daughter.
Then he dropped with a sobbing groan into a chair,
with his head in his hands. There was a general
scream from the women. One, more serviceable
than the rest, called from the window to a gaping
yokel below in the yard, and bade him ride for help.
Her face and voice froze him for a moment, but he
caught the words ‘Miss Julia,’ and two
minutes after he was astride a broad-backed plough-horse,
making for the distant village.
Samson Mountain sat with his face
hidden and spoke no word; at the sight of him his
wife’s face had turned to sudden rage, and she
stood over him like a ruffled hen, and clacked commination
of masculine imbecility, intermixed with wild plaints
for her child.
Julia slept through the tumult as
she had slept through the calm, and Mrs. Jenny, kneeling
beside her with her face in the bedclothes, moaned
love and penitent despair. Samson raised his head
at last, and looked with a dazed stare first at his
daughter and then at his wife, and left the room without
a word, pursued by a hailstorm of reproach. He
went into the yard and pottered aimlessly about, looking
old and broken on a sudden. The sound of horses’
hoofs roused him; it was the rustic messenger returning.
‘Where’s the doctor?’ demanded Samson.
’Gone to Heydon Hey. What am I to dew?’
‘Follow him an’ fetch him back. Hast
not gumption enough to know that?’ asked Samson
wearily. The man started again, and Samson began
once more his purposeless wanderings about the yard.
He had no sense of time or place, only a leaden weight
on heart and limb, which in all his life he had never
known before. He leaned his elbows on the fence
of the fold yard, and became conscious of a running
figure which neared him rapidly. He watched it
stupidly, and it was within twenty yards of him before
he recognised it-Dick Reddy, dust and mud
to the collar, hatless, and panting.
‘Julia!’ he gasped.
‘Tell me, is it true?’ ‘Julia’s
dyin,’ said Samson. ‘My God!’
he cried, with sudden passion, as if his own voice
had unlocked the sealed fountain of his grief, ‘my
little gell’s a-dyin’!’
‘Mr. Mountain,’ said Dick,
’I love her, you know I love her. Let me
see her.’ His voice, broken with fatigue
and emotion, his streaming eyes, his outstretched
hands, all pleaded with his words.
‘It’s all one who sees
her now,’ said Samson, and leaned his elbows
on the fence again. Dick took the despairing
speech for a permission, and entered the house.
At the bottom of the stairs, in the otherwise deserted
hall, he met Mrs. Jenny, a very moving statue of terror.
‘Dick,’ she said, clutching
the young man by the arm, ’I can’t abear
it any longer. Come in here wi’ me.’
She pulled him into a side room, and sitting down,
abandoned herself to weeping, wringing her hands, and
moaning.
‘I can’t abear it any
longer,’ she repeated. ‘I must tell
somebody, an’ I’ll tell you. It’s
all my wicked cruel fault.’
The old woman was so crazed with her
secret that she would have spoken in the shadow of
the gibbet. Ramblingly and incoherently, with
many breaks for tears and protestations and self-accusation,
she told her story.
’I’ve killed her, Dick.
But it was for your sake and hers as I done it.
I reckon they’ll hang me, an’ it’ll
serve me right.’ She besought him not to
betray her, and, in the same breath, announced her
intention to surrender herself at once to the parish
constable; and, indeed, between fear and remorse and
sorrow for the hopeless love she had striven to befriend,
was nearly mad. Dick heard her with such amazement
as may be best imagined, and suddenly, with a cry
that rang in her ears for many a long day afterwards,
ran from her and scaled the stairs to Julia’s
room, led thither by the sound of Mrs. Mountain’s
weeping. The old woman stared, as well she might,
at the intrusion, with a wonder which for a moment
conquered sorrow. He went straight to the bed,
and leaned over the stark figure upon it.
‘She’s not dead yet,’
he said, more to himself than to the grief-stricken
mother. Mrs. Mountain heard the words, and clutched
his arm. He turned to her. ‘Trust
me,’ he said, ‘and I’ll save her.’
The wild hope in the mother’s eyes was terrible
to see. ‘I love her,’ said Dick.
’You will trust me? Do as I bid you, and
you shall have Julia back in an hour.’
Samson Mountain meanwhile wandered
in the same purposeless fashion about the farm, and
held dumb converse with himself. He was a rough
man, something of a brute-a good deal of
an animal-but animals have their affections,
and he loved Julia as well as it was in his nature
to love anything. It was ingrained in him by
nature and by years of unquestioned domination to
bully and browbeat all defenceless people; but Julia,
the most defenceless of his surroundings, had been
treated always with a lighter hand. Childlike,
she had taken advantyage of her immunity in many little
ways, and though Samson had never forborne to bluster
at her girlish insubordination, he rather liked it
than not, and relished his daughter’s independence
and spirit. Julia was the only creature in the
household who dared to hold her own against him.
He was proud of her beauty and what he called her
‘lurning,’ and, more or less grumblingly,
petted her a good deal, and would have spoiled her
had she been of spoilable material. But till
this heavy blow fell he had never sounded the depths
of his own affection for her. The suddenness of
the blow stunned and bewildered him. He remembered
his words to Dick during their stormy interview in
the road, when he had said that he would rather see
Julia dead than married to him. Had Providence
taken him at his word? He did not say it, he
did not even think it consciously, but he would have
submitted to almost any conceivable indignity at the
hands of Abel Eeddy himself, to have felt his daughter’s
arms about his neck again. Little incidents of
Julia’s past life were fresh and vivid in his
memory. He had forgotten many of them, years
ago, but they sprang up in his mind now, like things
of yesterday.
He had wandered back to the front
of the house, and sat upon the rustic bench beside
the porch, with his elbows propped upon his knees,
and his eyes hidden in his shaking hands, when a voice
fell on his ear.
‘Neighbour!’
He raised his head. Abel Reddy stood before him.
With something of the old instinct
of hatred he had believed to be unconquerable he rose
and straightened himself before the hereditary enemy.
‘Neighbour,’ said Reddy
again. The word was pacific, but Mountain’s
blurred eyes, dim with pain and dazzled by the sunlight,
could not see the pity in his old enemy’s face,
and he waited doggedly. ’It’s come
to my ears as you’re i’ sore trouble.
So am I. Your trouble’s mine, though not so
great for me as it is for you, I was wi’ Dick
when he heard o’ your daughter’s danger,
an’ what I’d suspected a long time I know
now to be the truth. I did my best to keep ’em
apart-it was that as Dick was going to
London for. It seemed to behove me to come to
you and offer you my hand i’ your affliction.
I take shame to myself that I didn’t mek an
effort to end our quarrel long ago. We’re
gettin’ on in life, Mr. Mountain, and we’ve
got th’ excuse o’ hot blood no longer.’
Therewith he held out his hand, and
Samson, with hanging head, took it with a growl, which
might have been anathema or blessing. And as the
life-long enemies stood so linked, a window was suddenly
opened above, and Mrs. Mountain’s voice screamed
to her husband,
’Samson! Her’s alive!
Her’s awake! ’Both men looked up,
and beheld an unexpected picture framed by the open
window, Dick violently embraced by Mrs. Mountain,
and submitting to the furious assault with obvious
goodwill.
‘When the liquor’s out,
why clink the cannikin?’ The story of Julia
and her Romeo, like all other stories, had found its
end, and merged a little later into the history of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Reddy. The family feud was
buried, and Samson and Abel made very passable grandfathers
and dwelt in peace one with another. Dick never
told a living soul, not even Julia herself, of the
stratagem by which Mrs. Jenny had succeeded in uniting
them, and Mrs. Jenny, by complete reticence on the
subject, disproved the time-worn calumny which declares
woman’s inability to keep a secret.