The major’s visit to the
“Nag’s-head.”
Major Buckley and his wife stood together
in the verandah of their cottage, watching the storm.
All the afternoon they had seen it creeping higher
and higher, blacker and more threatening up the eastern
heavens, until it grew painful to wait any longer for
its approach. But now that it had burst on them,
and night had come on dark as pitch, they felt the
pleasant change in the atmosphere, and, in spite of
the continuous gleam of the lightning, and the eternal
roll and crackle of the thunder, they had come out
to see the beauty and majesty of the tempest.
They stood with their arms entwined
for some time, in silence; but after a crash louder
than any of those which had preceded it, Major Buckley
said:
“My dearest Agnes, you are very
courageous in a thunderstorm.”
“Why not, James?” she
said; “you cannot avoid the lightning, and the
thunder won’t harm you. Most women fear
the sound of the thunder more than anything, but I
suspect that Ciudad Rodrigo made more noise than this,
husband?”
“It did indeed, my dear.
More noise than I ever heard in any storm yet.
It is coming nearer.”
“I am afraid it will shake the
poor Vicar very much,” said Mrs. Buckley.
“Ah, there is Sam, crying.”
They both went into the sitting-room;
little Sam had petitioned to go to bed on the sofa
till the storm was over, and now, awakened by the
thunder, was sitting up in his bed, crying out for
his mother.
The Major went in and lay down by
the child on the sofa, to quiet him. “What!”
said he, “Sammy, you’re not afraid of thunder,
are you?”
“Yes! I am,” said
the child; “very much indeed. I am glad
you are come, father.”
“Lightning never strikes good boys, Sam,”
said the Major.
“Are you sure of that, father?” said the
little one.
That was a poser; so the Major thought
it best to counterfeit sleep; but he overdid it, and
snored so loud, that the boy began to laugh, and his
father had to practise his deception with less noise.
And by degrees, the little hand that held his moustache
dropped feebly on the bedclothes, and the Major, ascertaining
by the child’s regular breathing that his son
was asleep, gently raised his vast length, and proposed
to his wife to come into the verandah again.
“The storm is breaking, my love,”
said he; “and the air is deliciously cool out
there. Put your shawl on and come out.”
They went out again; the lightning
was still vivid, but the thunder less loud. Straight
down the garden from them stretched a broad gravel
walk, which now, cut up by the rain into a hundred
water channels, showed at each flash like rivers of
glittering silver. Looking down this path toward
the black wood during one of the longest continued
illuminations of the lightning, they saw for an instant
a dark, tall figure, apparently advancing towards
them. Then all the prospect was wrapped again
in tenfold gloom.
Mrs. Buckley uttered an exclamation,
and held tighter to her husband’s arm.
Every time the garden was lit up, they saw the figure,
nearer and nearer, till they knew that it was standing
before them in the darkness; the Major was about to
speak, when a hoarse voice, heard indistinctly above
the rushing of the rain, demanded:
“Is that Major Buckley?”
At the same minute the storm-light
blazed up once more, and fell upon an object so fearful
and startling that they both fell back amazed.
A woman was standing before them, tall, upright, and
bareheaded; her long black hair falling over a face
as white and ghastly as a three days’ corpse;
her wild countenance rendered more terrible by the
blue glare of the lightning shining on the rain that
streamed from every lock of her hair and every shred
of her garments. She looked like some wild daughter
of the storm, who had lost her way, and came wandering
to them for shelter.
“I am Major Buckley,”
was the answer. “What do you want?
But in God’s name come in out of the rain.”
“Come in and get your things
dried, my good woman,” said Mrs. Buckley.
“What do you want with my husband such a night
as this?”
“Before I dry my things, or
come in, I will state my business,” said the
woman, coming under the verandah. “After
that I will accept your hospitality. This is
a night when polecats and rabbits would shelter together
in peace; and yet such a night as this, a man turns
out of his house the woman who has lain beside him
twenty years.”
“Who are you, my good soul?” said the
Major.
“They call me Madge the Witch,”
she said; “I lived with old Hawker, at the Woodlands,
till to-night, and he has turned me out. I want
to put you in possession of some intelligence that
may save much misery to some that you love.”
“I can readily believe that
you can do it,” said the Major, “but pray
don’t stand there; come in with my wife, and
get your things dried.”
“Wait till you hear what I have
to say: George Hawker, my son ”
“Your son good God!”
“I thought you would have known
that. The Vicar does. Well, this son of
mine has run off with the Vicar’s daughter.”
“Well?”
“Well, he has committed forgery.
It’ll be known all over the country to-morrow,
and even now I fear the runners are after him.
If he is taken before he marries that girl, things
will be only worse than they are. But never mind
whether he does or not, perhaps you differ with me;
perhaps you think that, if you could find the girl
now, you could stop her and bring her home; but you
don’t know where she is. I do, and if you
will give me your solemn word of honour as a gentleman
to give him warning that his forgery for five hundred
pounds is discovered, I will give you his direction.”
The Major hesitated for a moment, thinking.
“If you reflect a moment, you
must see how straightforward my story is. What
possible cause can I have to mislead you? I know
which way you will decide, so I wait patiently.”
“I think I ought to say yes,
my love,” said the Major to his wife; “if
it turned out afterwards that I neglected any opportunity
of saving this poor girl (particularly if this tale
of the forgery be true), I should never forgive myself.”
“I agree with you, my dear,”
said Mrs. Buckley. “Give your promise, and
go to seek her.”
“Well, then,” said the
Major; “I give you my word of honour that I will
give Hawker due warning of his forgery being discovered,
if you will give me his direction. I anticipate
that they are in London, and I shall start to-night,
to be in time for the morning coach. Now, will
you give me the address?”
“Yes!” said Madge.
“They are at the Nag’s Head, Buckingham
Street, Strand, London; can you remember that?”
“I know where the street is,”
said the Major; “now will you go into the kitchen,
and make yourself comfortable? My dear, you will
see my valise packed? Ellen, get this person’s
clothes dried, and get her some hot wine. By-the-bye,”
said he, following her into the kitchen, “you
must have had a terrible quarrel with Hawker, for
him to send you out such a night as this?”
“It was about this matter,”
she said: “the boy forged on his father,
and I knew it, and tried to screen him. My own
son, you know.”
“It was natural enough,”
said the Major. “You are not deceiving me,
are you? I don’t see why you should, though.”
“Before God, I am not.
I only want the boy to get warning.”
“You must sleep here to-night,”
said the Major; “and to-morrow you can go on
your way, though, if you cannot conveniently get away
in the morning, don’t hurry, you know.
My house is never shut against unfortunate people.
I have heard a great deal of you, but I never saw
you before; you must be aware, however, that the character
you have held in the place is not such as warrants
me in asking you to stay here for any time.”
The Major left the kitchen, and crossed
the yard. In a bedroom above the stable slept
his groom, a man who had been through his campaigns
with him from first to last. It was to waken him
that the Major took his way up the narrow stairs towards
the loft.
“Jim,” he said, “I want my horse
in an hour.”
The man was out of bed in a moment,
and while he was dressing, the Major continued:
“You know Buckingham Street,
Strand, Jim, don’t you? When you were recruiting
you used to hang out at a public-house there, unless
I am mistaken.”
“Exactly so, sir! We did;
and a many good chaps we picked up there, gents and
all sorts. Why, it was in that werry place, Major,
as we ’listed Lundon; him as was afterwards
made sergeant for being the first man into Sebastian,
and arterwards married Skettles; her as fell out of
eighteen stories at Brussels looking after the Duke,
and she swore at them as came to pick her up, she
did; and walked in at the front door as bold as brass.”
“There, my good lad,”
said the Major; “what’s the good of telling
such stories as that? Nobody believes them, you
know. Do you know the Nag’s Head there?
It’s a terribly low place, is it not?”
“It’s a much changed if
it ain’t, sir,” said Jim, putting on his
breeches. “I was in there not eighteen months
since. It’s a fighting-house; and there
used to be a dog show there, and a reunion of vocal
talent, and all sorts of villanies.”
“Well, see to the horse, Jim,
and I’ll sing out when I’m ready,”
said the Major, and went back into the house.
He came back through the kitchen,
and saw that Madge was being treated by the maids
with that respect that a reputed witch never fails
to command; then, having sat for some time talking
to his wife, and finding that the storm was cleared
off, he kissed his sleeping child and its mother,
and, mounting his horse in the stable-yard, rode off
towards Exeter.
In the morning, when Mrs. Buckley
came down stairs, she inquired for Madge. They
told her she had been up some time, and, having got
some breakfast, was walking up and down in front of
the house. Going there, Mrs. Buckley found her.
Her dress was rearranged with picturesque neatness,
and a red handkerchief pinned over her rich dark hair,
that last night had streamed wild and wet in the tempest.
Altogether, she looked an utterly different being
from the strange, storm-beaten creature who had craved
their hospitality the night before. Mrs. Buckley
admired the bold, upright, handsome figure before her,
and gave her a cheery “good morning.”
“I only stayed,” said
Madge, “to wish you goodbye, and thank you for
your kindness. When they who should have had some
pity on me turned me out, you took me in!”
“You are heartily welcome,”
said Mrs. Buckley. “Cannot I do more for
you? Do you want money? I fear you must!”
“None, I thank you kindly,”
she replied; “that would break the spell.
Good-bye!”
“Good-bye!” said Mrs. Buckley.
Madge stood in front of the door and raised her hand.
“The blessing of God,”
she said, “shall be upon the house of the Buckleys,
and more especially upon you and your husband, and
the boy that is sleeping inside. He shall be
a brave and a good man, and his wife shall be the
fairest and best in the country side. Your kine
shall cover the plains until no man can number them,
and your sheep shall be like the sands of the sea.
When misfortune and death and murder fall upon your
neighbours, you shall stand between the dead and the
living, and the troubles that pass over your heads
shall be like the shadow of the light clouds that
fly across the moor on a sunny day. And when in
your ripe and honoured old age you shall sit with your
husband, in a garden of your own planting, in the
lands far away, and see your grandchildren playing
around you, you shall think of the words of the wild,
lost gipsy woman, who gave you her best blessing before
she went away and was seen no more.”
Mrs. Buckley tried to say “Amen,”
but found herself crying. Something there was
in that poor creature, homeless, penniless, friendless,
that made her heart like wax. She watched her
as she strode down the path, and afterwards looked
for her re-appearing on a high exposed part of the
road, a quarter of a mile off, thinking she would take
that way. But she waited long, and never again
saw that stern, tall figure, save in her dreams.
She turned at last, and one of the
maids stood beside her.
“Oh, missis,” she said,
“you’re a lucky woman today. There’s
some in this parish would have paid a hundred pounds
for such a fortune as that from her. It’ll
come true, you will see!”
“I hope it may, you silly girl,”
said Mrs. Buckley; and then she went in and knelt
beside her sleeping boy, and prayed that the blessing
of the gipsy woman might be fulfilled.
It was quite late on the evening of
his second day’s journey that the Major, occupying
the box-seat of the “Exterminator,” dashed
with comet-like speed through so much of the pomps
and vanities of this wicked world as showed itself
in Piccadilly at half-past seven on a spring afternoon.
“Hah!” he soliloquized,
passing Hyde-park Corner, “these should be the
folks going out to dinner. They dine later and
later every year. At this rate they’ll
dine at half-past one in twenty years’ time.
That’s the Duke’s new house; eh, coachman?
By George, there’s his Grace himself, on his
brown cob; God bless him! There are a pair of
good-stepping horses, and old Lady E
behind ’em, by Jove! in her war-paint
and feathers pinker than ever. She
hasn’t got tired of it yet. She’d
dance at her own funeral if she could. And there’s
Charley Bridgenorth in the club balcony I
wonder what he finds to do in peace time? and
old B talking to him. What
does Charley mean by letting himself be seen in the
same balcony with that disreputable old fellow?
I hope he won’t get his morals corrupted!
Ah! So here we are! eh?”
He dismounted at the White Horse Cellar,
and took a hasty dinner. His great object was
speed; and so he hardly allowed himself ten minutes
to finish his pint of port before he started into
the street, to pursue the errand on which he had come.
It was nearly nine o’clock,
and he thought he would be able to reach his destination
in ten minutes. But it was otherwise ordered.
His evil genius took him down St. James Street.
He tried to persuade himself that it was the shortest
way, though he knew all the time that it wasn’t.
And so he was punished in this way: he had got
no further than Crockford’s, when, in the glare
of light opposite the door of that establishment,
he saw three men standing, one of whom was talking
and laughing in a tone perhaps a little louder than
it is customary to use in the streets nowadays.
Buckley knew that voice well (better, perhaps, among
the crackle of musketry than in the streets of London),
and, as the broad-shouldered owner of it turned his
jolly, handsome face towards him, he could not suppress
a low laugh of satisfaction. At the same moment
the before-mentioned man recognised him, and shouted
out his name.
“Busaco Buckley, by the Lord,”
he said, “revisiting once more the glimpses
of the gas-lamps! My dear old fellow, how are
you, and where do you come from?”
The Major found himself quickly placed
under a lamp for inspection, and surrounded by three
old and well-beloved fellow-campaigners. What
could a man do under the circumstances? Nothing,
if human and fallible, I should say, but what the
Major did stay there, laughing and joking,
and talking of old times, and freshen up his honest
heart, and shake his honest sides with many an old
half-forgotten tale of fun and mischief.
“Now,” he said at last,
“you must let me go. You Barton (to the
first man he had recognised), you are a married man;
what are you doing at Crockford’s?”
“The same as you are,”
said the other, “standing outside
the door. The pavement’s free, I suppose.
I haven’t been in such a place these five years.
Where are you staying, old boy?”
The Major told them, and they agreed
to meet at breakfast next morning. Then, after
many farewells, and callings back, he pursued his way
towards the Strand, finding to his disgust that it
was nearly ten o’clock.
He, nevertheless, held on his way
undiscouraged, and turning by degrees into narrower
and narrower streets, came at last on one quieter than
the others, which ended abruptly at the river.
It was a quiet street, save at one
point, and that was where a blaze of gas (then recently
introduced, and a great object of curiosity to the
Major) was thrown across the street, from the broad
ornamented windows of a flash public-house. Here
there was noise enough. Two men fighting, and
three or four more encouraging, while a half-drunken
woman tried to separate them. From the inside,
too, came a noise of singing, quarrelling, and swearing,
such as made the Major cross the road, and take his
way on the darker side of the street.
But when he got opposite the aforesaid
public-house, he saw that it was called the “Nag’s
Head,” and that it was kept by one J. Trotter.
“What an awful place to take that girl to!”
said the Major. “But there may be some
private entrance, and a quiet part of the house set
by for a hotel.” Nevertheless, having looked
well about him, he could see nothing of the sort,
and perceived that he must storm the bar.
But he stood irresolute for a moment.
It looked such a very low place, clean and handsome
enough, but still the company about the door looked
so very disreputable. “J. Trotter!”
he reflected. “Why, that must be Trotter
the fighting-man. I hope it may be; he will remember
me.”
So he crossed. When he came within
the sphere of the gas lamps, those who were assisting
at the fight grew silent, and gazed upon him with
open eyes. As he reached the door one of them
remarked, with a little flourish of oaths as a margin
or garland round his remark, that “of all the
swells he’d ever seen, that ’un was the
biggest, at all events.”
Similarly, when they in the bar saw
that giant form, the blue coat and brass buttons,
and, above all, the moustache (sure sign of a military
man in those days), conversation ceased, and the Major
then and there became the event of the evening.
He looked round as he came in, and, through a door
leading inwards, he saw George Hawker himself, standing
talking to a man with a dog under each arm.
The Major was not deceived as to the
identity of J. Trotter. J. Trotter, the hero
of a hundred fights, stood himself behind his own
bar, a spectacle for the gods. A chest like a
bull, a red neck, straight up and down with the back
of his head, and a fist like a seal’s flipper,
proclaimed him the prize-fighter; and his bright grey
eye, and ugly laughing face, proclaimed him the merry,
good-humoured varlet that he was.
What a wild state of amazement he
was in when he realized the fact that Major Buckley
of the th was actually towering aloft under
the chandelier, and looking round for some one to
address! With what elephantine politeness and
respect did he show the Major into a private parlour,
sweeping off at one round nearly a dozen pint-pots
that covered the table, and then, shutting the door,
stand bowing and smiling before his old pupil!
“And so you are gone into business,
John, are you?” said the Major. “I’m
glad to see it. I hope you are doing as well as
you deserve.”
“Much better than that,”
said the prize-fighter. “Much better than
that, sir, I assure you.”
“Well, I’m going to get
you to do something for me,” said the Major.
“Do you know, John, that you are terribly fat?”
“The business allus does
make flesh, sir. More especially to coves as
has trained much.”
“Yes, yes, John, I am going
from the point. There is a young man of the name
of Hawker here?”
The prize-fighter remained silent,
but a grin gathered on his face. “I never
contradicts a gentleman,” he said. “And
if you say he’s here, why, in course, he is
here. But I don’t say he’s here; you
mind that, sir.”
“My good fellow, I saw him as I came in,”
said the Major.
“Oh, indeed,” said the
other; “then that absolves me from any responsibility.
He told me to deny him to anybody but one, and you
ain’t she. He spends a deal of money with
me, sir; so, in course, I don’t want to offend
him. By-the-bye, sir, excuse me a moment.”
The Major saw that he had got hold
of the right man, and waited willingly. The fighting-man
went to the door, and called out, “My dear.”
A tall, goodlooking woman came to the bar, who made
a low curtsey on being presented to the Major.
“My dear,” repeated Trotter, “the
south side.” “The particular, I suppose,”
she said. “In course,” said he.
So she soon appeared with a bottle of Madeira, which
was of such quality that the Major, having tasted
it, winked at the prize-fighter, and the latter laughed,
and rubbed his hands.
“Now,” said the Major,
“do you mind telling me whether this Hawker is
here alone?”
“He don’t live here.
He only comes here of a day, and sometimes stays till
late. This evening a pretty young lady yes,
a lady come and inquired for him in
my bar, and I was struck all of a heap to see such
a creature in such a place, all frightened out of her
wits. So I showed her through in a minute, and
up stairs to where my wife sits, and she waited there
till he come in. And she hadn’t been gone
ten minutes when you come.”
The Major swore aloud, without equivocation
or disguise. “Ah,” he said, “if
I had not met Barton! Pray, Trotter, have you
any idea where Hawker lives?”
“Not the least in the world,
further than it’s somewhere Hampstead way.
That’s a thing he evidently don’t want
known.”
“Do you think it likely that
he and that young lady live in the same house?
I need not disguise from you that I am come after her,
to endeavour to get her back to her family.”
“I know they don’t live
in the same house,” said Trotter, “because
I heard her say, to-night, before she went away, ‘Do
look round, George,’ she says, ‘at my
house, for ten minutes, before you go home.’”
“You have done me a great kindness,”
said the Major, “in what you have told me.
I don’t know how to thank you.”
“It’s only one,”
said the prize-fighter, “in return for a many
you done me; and you are welcome to it, sir.
Now, I expect you’d like to see this young gent;
so follow me, if you please.”
Through many passages, past many doors,
he followed him, until they left the noise of the
revelry behind, and at last, at the end of a long
dark passage, the prizefighter suddenly threw open
a door, and announced “Major Buckley!”
There were four men playing at cards,
and the one opposite to him was George Hawker.
The Major saw at a glance, almost before anyone had
time to speak, that George was losing money, and that
the other three were confederates.
The prize-fighter went up to the table
and seized the cards; then, after a momentary examination,
threw both packs in the fire.
“When gents play cards in my
house, I expect them to use the cards I provides at
the bar, and not private packs, whether marked or not.
Mr. Hawker, I warned you before about this; you’ll
lose every sixpence you’re worth, and then you
will say it was done at my house, quite forgetting
to mention that I warned you of it repeatedly.”
But George took no notice of him.
“Really, Major Buckley,” he began, “this
is rather ”
“Rather an intrusion, you would
say eh, Mr. Hawker?” said the Major;
“so it is, but the urgency of my business must
be my apology. Can you give me a few words alone?”
George rose and came out with them.
The prizefighter showed them into another room, and
the Major asked him to stand in the passage, and see
that no one was listening; “you see, John,”
he added, “we are very anxious not to be overheard.”
“I am not at all particular
myself,” said George Hawker. “I have
nothing to conceal.”
“You will alter your mind before
I have done, sir,” said the Major.
George didn’t like the look
of affairs. How came it that the Major and
the prize-fighter knew one another so well? What
did the former mean by all this secrecy? He determined
to put a bold face on the matter.
“Miss Thornton is living with
you, sir, I believe?” began the Major.
“Not at all, sir; Miss Thornton
is in lodgings of her own. I have the privilege
of seeing her for a few hours every day. In fact,
I may go as far as to say that I am engaged to be
married to her, and that that auspicious event is
to come off on Thursday week.”
“May I ask you to favour me
with her direction?” said the Major.
“I am sorry to disoblige you,
Major Buckley, but I must really decline;” answered
George. “I am not unaware how disinclined
her family are to the connexion; and, as I cannot
but believe that you come on their behalf, I cannot
think that an interview would be anything but prejudicial
to my interest. I must remind you, too, that Miss
Thornton is of age, and her own mistress in every
way.”
While George had been speaking, it
passed through the Major’s mind: “What
a checkmate it would be, if I were to withhold the
information I have, and set the runners on him, here!
I might save the girl, and further the ends of justice;
but my hands are tied by the promise I gave that woman, how
unfortunate!”
“Then, Mr. Hawker,” he
said aloud, “I am to understand that you refuse
me this address?”
“I am necessitated to refuse it most positively,
sir.”
“I am sorry for it. I leave
it to your conscience. Now, I have got a piece
of intelligence to give you, which I fear will be somewhat
unpalatable I got your address at this place
from a woman of the name of Madge ”
“You did!” exclaimed George.
“Who was turned out of doors
by your father, the night before last, in consequence,
I understood, of some misdeeds of hers having come
to light. She came immediately to my house, and
offered to give me your direction, on condition of
my passing my word of honour to deliver you this message:
’that the forgery (500 pounds was the sum mentioned,
I think) was discovered, and that the Bank was going
to prosecute.’ I of course form no judgment
as to the truth or falsehood of this: I leave
you to take your own measures about it only
I once again ask you whether you will give me an interview
with Miss Thornton?”
George had courage enough left to
say hoarsely and firmly, “No!”
“Then,” replied the Major,
“I must call you to witness that I have performed
my errand to you faithfully. I beg, also, that
you will carry all our kindest remembrances to Miss
Thornton, and tell her that her poor father was struck
with paralysis when he missed her, and that he is
not expected to live many weeks. And I wish you
good night.”
He passed out, and down the stairs;
as he passed the public parlour-door, he heard a man
bawling out a song, two or three lines of which he
heard, and which made him blush to the tips of his
ears, old soldier as he was.
As he walked up the street, he soliloquised:
“A pretty mess I’ve made of it done
him all the service I could, and not helped her a bit I
see there is no chance of seeing her, though I shall
try. I will go round Hampstead to-morrow, though
that is a poor chance. In Paris, now, or Vienna,
one could find her directly. What a pity we have
no police!”