Mary Dillon did the greater part of
the talking on the way home, Gartram saying scarcely
a word, but making great use of his eyes, to see how
Glyddyr took the unpleasant contretemps.
“And just after what I had said
to him,” muttered Gartram. “The
insolent young scoundrel! The miserable, contemptible
pauper! How dare he?”
But Glyddyr’s behaviour was
perfect, and excited Gartram’s wonder.
“He can’t have seen what
I did,” he thought, “or he would never
talk to her so coolly.”
For, ignoring everything, and as if
he was blind to what had passed, Glyddyr dashed at
once into a series of inquiries about Danmouth, and
the weather in the winter.
“Do the storms affect the place
much?” he said, looking at Claude.
“Knock the pots off sometimes,
and always wash the slates clean,” said Mary,
before Claude could reply.
“Not pleasant for the inhabitants,”
said Glyddyr, after giving Mary a quick, amused glance
before turning again to Claude. “But at
the Fort, of course, you are too high up for the waves
to reach?”
“Salt spray coats all the windows,
and makes the walls shine,” interposed Mary.
“What will he think of me?”
thought Claude; and then she wondered that she did
not feel sorry, but that all the time, in spite of
her father’s fiercely sullen looks, a peculiar
kind of joy seemed to pervade her breast.
Glyddyr talked on, but he was completely
talked down by Mary, who felt that the kindest thing
she could do was to draw every one’s attention
from her cousin, till they had passed through the little
town, and nearly reached the Fort, where they were
met by a rough-looking workman, who ran unceremoniously
towards them, caught hold of Gartram roughly, and
cried out, in wild excitement,
“Come on to the quarry at once.”
“What’s the matter fall of
rock?” cried Gartram.
“Blasting Woodham blown
all to bits,” panted the man.
“Then he has been using dynamite.”
“Nay; soon as we picked him up, he said it was
the cursed bad powder.”
“Bah! Where is he?”
“We took him home, and I fetched the doctor,
and then come on here.”
“Run home, girls. No,
Mr Glyddyr, see them in. I’m going on to
my workmen’s cottages.”
He hurried off, and Glyddyr turned to Claude.
“I’m sorry there is such
terrible news,” he began; but Claude did not
seem to hear him.
“Make haste, Mary,” she
said hurriedly. “Bring brandy and wine,
and join me there.”
“My dear Miss Gartram, are you going to the
scene of the accident?”
Claude looked at him in an absent way.
“I am going to the Woodhams’
cottage,” she said hurriedly. “Sarah
Woodham was our old servant. Don’t stop
me, please.”
She hurried along the narrow road
leading west, and it was not until she had gone some
hundred yards following the messenger, who was trotting
heavily at Gartram’s heels, that she realised
that she was not alone.
“Mr Glyddyr!” she exclaimed.
“Pray pardon me,” he said,
in a low, earnest voice. “As a friend,
I cannot let you go alone at a time like this.”
Claude looked up at him wildly, but
there was so much respectful deference in his manner
that she could say nothing. In fact, her thoughts
were all with the suffering man and woman the
victims of this deplorable mishap.
It was nearly half-a-mile along the
rough cliff road; and it was traversed in silence,
Claude being too much agitated to say more.
The scene was easy enough to find
when they were approaching the place, for a knot of
rough quarry workmen were gathered round a clean-looking,
white-washed cottage, from out of whose open door came
the harsh tones of a man’s voice, while the
crowd parted left and right, and several placed the
short black pipes they were smoking hurriedly in their
pockets.
Claude had nearly reached the door
when the words which were being uttered within the
cottage seemed to act like a spell, arresting her
steps and making her half turn shuddering away, as
they seemed to lash her, so keenly and cuttingly they
fell.
“Curse you! curse you!
It’s all your doing. You’ve murdered
me. Sarah, my girl, he has done for me at last.”
Gartram’s voice was heard in
low, deep, muttering tones, as if in reproof; but
the injured man’s voice overbore it directly,
sounding shrill and harsh from agony as he cried,
“Let every one outside hear
it. Hark ye, lads, I wanted to use the dinnymite,
but he made me use the cursed old powder again, and
he has murdered me.”
“My good man,” said a
fresh voice, which sounded clear in the silence, “you
must be calm. It was a terrible accident.”
“Nay, doctor, it’s his
doing; it’s his meanness. I wanted him
to use the dinnymite, and he would keep to powder.
He has murdered me.”
There was a low groan, and then a
terrible cry; and as Glyddyr mentally pictured the
scene within, of the doctor dressing the injuries,
he turned to the trembling girl beside him.
“Miss Gartram,” he whispered,
“this is no place for you. There is plenty
of help. Let me see you home.”
She shook her head as she looked at
him wildly, and, making a deprecating gesture, Glyddyr
turned to one of the men.
“Is he very bad?” he whispered.
“Blowed a’most to bits,” said the
man in a hoarse whisper.
“Did the powder go off too soon?”
“It warn’t powder at all,”
said the man, as Gartram stepped quickly out of the
cottage. “It were the dinnymite.
He would use it, and he warn’t used to its ways.”
It was evident from the peculiar tightening
of Gartram’s lips that he had heard the man’s
words; and he turned back and re-entered the cottage,
for his name was sharply pronounced within.
Then there was another groan, and
the injured man cried,
“Don’t, don’t; you’re killing
me.”
At that moment a thin, keen-looking
woman of about thirty rushed out of the cottage, her
eyes wild and staring, and her face blanched, while
her hands and apron were horribly stained.
“I can’t bear it,”
she cried; “I can’t bear it!” and
she flung herself upon her knees in the stony road,
and covered her face with her hands, sobbing hysterically.
The sight of the suffering woman roused
Claude to action; and as she took a couple of steps
forward, and with the tears falling fast, laid her
hand upon the woman’s shoulder, a low murmur
arose among the men, and Glyddyr saw that they drew
back respectfully, several turning right away.
“Sarah, my poor Sarah,” said Claude, bending
low.
At the tender words of sympathy and
the touch of the gentle hands, the woman let her own
fall from her face, and stared up appealingly at the
speaker.
Claude involuntarily shrank away from
the ghastly face, for the hands had printed hideous
traces upon the woman’s brow.
The shrinking away was momentary,
for, recovering herself. Claude drew her handkerchief
from her pocket, to turn in surprise as it was drawn
from her hand, but she directly gave Glyddyr a grateful
look, as she saw him step to a rough granite trough
into which a jet of pure water was pouring from the
cliff, and saturating it quickly, he returned the
handkerchief to its owner.
But before the blood stains could
be removed, the voice of the injured man was heard
calling.
“Sarah! Don’t leave me, my girl.
He has murdered me.”
The woman gave Claude a wild look,
rose from her knees, and tottered back to the cottage
as the voice of Gartram was heard in angry retort.
“Its like talking to a madman,
Ike Woodham,” came clear and loud; “but
you’ve got hurt by your own wilful obstinacy,
and you want to throw the blame on me.”
As he spoke, Gartram strode out of
the cottage, and then whispered to his child,
“Come home, my dear. You can do no good.”
“No, no; not yet, papa,”
she whispered. “I must try if I can help
poor Sarah in her terrible trouble.”
A low murmur arose from the little
crowd, and this seemed to excite Gartram.
“Well,” he cried fiercely,
“what does that mean? It was his own fault
in direct opposition to my orders; and this is not
the first accident through your own folly.”
The low, angry muttering continued.
“Here, come away, Claude,”
cried Gartram fiercely, as he looked round at the
lowering faces.
“He has murdered me, I tell
you!” came from the open cottage door.
“Bah!” ejaculated Gartram
angrily, and he strode away, but returned directly.
“Are you coming, my girl?”
“Yes, papa, soon. Let me see if I can
be of use.”
“Look here, Mr Glyddyr,”
said Gartram, speaking in a low, excited voice, “I
can’t stop. I shall be saying things that
will make them mad. See after Claude, and bring
her home. The senseless idiots! If a man
bruises himself with his own hammer, it is blamed on
me.”
He strode away, and ignoring Glyddyr’s
presence, Claude was moving softly toward the door,
when the man who had brought the message held out
his hand to arrest her.
“Don’t go in, dear bairn,”
he said in a husky whisper; “it isn’t for
the likes of you to see.”
“Thank you, Wolfe,” she said calmly, “I
am not afraid.”
But at that moment, as Glyddyr was
about to make a protest, a quiet-looking, gentlemanly
man appeared at the door turning down his cuffs, the
perspiration glistening upon his high white forehead
as he came out into the sun.
“No, no, my dear child,”
he said in a whisper, as a low moaning came from within
and seemed to be followed by the low soft washing of
the waves below. “You can do no good.”
“Is is he very bad, Doctor Asher?”
asked Claude.
He looked at her for an instant or
two without replying, and then bent his head.
“Oh!” ejaculated Claude, with a low cry
of pain.
“Terribly crushed, my dear; better leave them
together alone.”
“But you do not think oh,
Doctor Asher, you can save him?”
“Is it so bad as that, sir?”
whispered Glyddyr, as he saw the peculiar look in
the doctor’s face. “Couldn’t
you with more help shall I send?”
“My dear sir,” said the
doctor in a low voice, “half a dozen of the
crack London surgeons couldn’t save him.”
“Oh!” sighed Claude again.
“But a clergyman. Mr Glyddyr, would you
go into Danmouth?”
“Better not, my dear child,”
said the doctor quietly. “You know their
peculiar tenets. His wife was praying with him
when I came out.”
As if to endorse the doctor’s
words, the low, constant murmur of a voice was heard
from within, and from time to time a gasping utterance
was heard, and then twice over the word “Amen.”
Just then Claude stepped softly toward
the open doorway, and sank upon her knees with her
hands clasped, and her face turned up appealingly
toward the sunny sky, while all around seemed full
of life, and hope, though the black shadow of death
was closing in upon the humble roof. And as Glyddyr
saw the sweet, pure, upturned face, with its closed
eyes, he involuntarily took off his hat, and gazed
wistfully, with something very near akin to love seeming
to swell within his breast.
The silence was very deep, though
the murmur from the cottage continued, till, in the
midst of what seemed to be a painful pause, a loud
and bitter wail came upon the stillness, and the doctor
hurriedly stepped within.
“Poor Ike’s cottage is
to let, mates,” said a rough, low voice; “who
wants to make a change?”
“Dead?” asked Claude,
with a motion of her lips, as after a short space
the doctor returned.
“No; the draught I have given
him to dull the pain has had effect: he is asleep.”
“And when he awakes, Doctor
Asher?” whispered Claude, as she clung to his
arm.
The doctor shook his head.
“Can you do nothing?”
“Only try to lull the pain,”
was the reply. And then quickly, “Wanted
somewhere else?”
This last was to himself as a man
was seen running toward them, and Claude turned if
possible paler as she recognised one of the servants
from the Fort.
He ran up breathlessly.
“Miss Claude Doctor
Asher,” he panted. “Come at once.
Master’s got another of his fits.”