He stopped and reflected how to turn
this rebuff to advantage. Baulked in his project
of entering the watering-place and enjoying congratulations
upon his patriotic bearing during the advance, he sulkily
considered that he might be able to make some use of
his enforced retirement by riding to Overcombe and
glorifying himself in the eyes of Miss Garland before
the truth should have reached that hamlet. Having
thus decided he spurred on in a better mood.
By this time the volunteers were on
the march, and as Derriman ascended the road he met
the Overcombe company, in which trudged Miller Loveday
shoulder to shoulder with the other substantial householders
of the place and its neighbourhood, duly equipped
with pouches, cross-belts, firelocks, flint-boxes,
pickers, worms, magazines, priming-horns, heel-ball,
and pomatum. There was nothing to be gained by
further suppression of the truth, and briefly informing
them that the danger was not so immediate as had been
supposed, Festus galloped on. At the end of
another mile he met a large number of pikemen, including
Bob Loveday, whom the yeoman resolved to sound upon
the whereabouts of Anne. The circumstances were
such as to lead Bob to speak more frankly than he
might have done on reflection, and he told Festus the
direction in which the women had been sent.
Then Festus informed the group that the report of
invasion was false, upon which they all turned to go
homeward with greatly relieved spirits.
Bob walked beside Derriman’s
horse for some distance. Loveday had instantly
made up his mind to go and look for the women, and
ease their anxiety by letting them know the good news
as soon as possible. But he said nothing of
this to Festus during their return together; nor did
Festus tell Bob that he also had resolved to seek them
out, and by anticipating every one else in that enterprise,
make of it a glorious opportunity for bringing Miss
Garland to her senses about him. He still resented
the ducking that he had received at her hands, and
was not disposed to let that insult pass without obtaining
some sort of sweet revenge.
As soon as they had parted Festus
cantered on over the hill, meeting on his way the
Longpuddle volunteers, sixty rank and file, under Captain
Cunningham; the Casterbridge company, ninety strong
(known as the ‘Consideration Company’
in those days), under Captain Strickland; and others-all
with anxious faces and covered with dust. Just
passing the word to them and leaving them at halt,
he proceeded rapidly onward in the direction of King’s-Bere.
Nobody appeared on the road for some time, till after
a ride of several miles he met a stray corporal of
volunteers, who told Festus in answer to his inquiry
that he had certainly passed no gig full of women
of the kind described. Believing that he had
missed them by following the highway, Derriman turned
back into a lane along which they might have chosen
to journey for privacy’s sake, notwithstanding
the badness and uncertainty of its track. Arriving
again within five miles of Overcombe, he at length
heard tidings of the wandering vehicle and its precious
burden, which, like the Ark when sent away from the
country of the Philistines, had apparently been left
to the instincts of the beast that drew it.
A labouring man, just at daybreak, had seen the helpless
party going slowly up a distant drive, which he pointed
out.
No sooner had Festus parted from this
informant than he beheld Bob approaching, mounted
on the miller’s second and heavier horse.
Bob looked rather surprised, and Festus felt his
coming glory in danger.
‘They went down that lane,’
he said, signifying precisely the opposite direction
to the true one. ’I, too, have been on
the look-out for missing friends.’
As Festus was riding back there was
no reason to doubt his information, and Loveday rode
on as misdirected. Immediately that he was out
of sight Festus reversed his course, and followed
the track which Anne and her companions were last
seen to pursue.
This road had been ascended by the
gig in question nearly two hours before the present
moment. Molly, the servant, held the reins, Mrs.
Loveday sat beside her, and Anne behind. Their
progress was but slow, owing partly to Molly’s
want of skill, and partly to the steepness of the
road, which here passed over downs of some extent,
and was rarely or never mended. It was an anxious
morning for them all, and the beauties of the early
summer day fell upon unheeding eyes. They were
too anxious even for conjecture, and each sat thinking
her own thoughts, occasionally glancing westward,
or stopping the horse to listen to sounds from more
frequented roads along which other parties were retreating.
Once, while they listened and gazed thus, they saw
a glittering in the distance, and heard the tramp
of many horses. It was a large body of cavalry
going in the direction of the King’s watering-place,
the same regiment of dragoons, in fact, which Festus
had seen further on in its course. The women
in the gig had no doubt that these men were marching
at once to engage the enemy. By way of varying
the monotony of the journey Molly occasionally burst
into tears of horror, believing Buonaparte to be in
countenance and habits precisely what the caricatures
represented him. Mrs. Loveday endeavoured to
establish cheerfulness by assuring her companions
of the natural civility of the French nation, with
whom unprotected women were safe from injury, unless
through the casual excesses of soldiery beyond control.
This was poor consolation to Anne, whose mind was
more occupied with Bob than with herself, and a miserable
fear that she would never again see him alive so paled
her face and saddened her gaze forward, that at last
her mother said, ’Who was you thinking of, my
dear?’ Anne’s only reply was a look at
her mother, with which a tear mingled.
Molly whipped the horse, by which
she quickened his pace for five yards, when he again
fell into the perverse slowness that showed how fully
conscious he was of being the master-mind and chief
personage of the four. Whenever there was a
pool of water by the road he turned aside to drink
a mouthful, and remained there his own time in spite
of Molly’s tug at the reins and futile fly-flapping
on his rump. They were now in the chalk district,
where there were no hedges, and a rough attempt at
mending the way had been made by throwing down huge
lumps of that glaring material in heaps, without troubling
to spread it or break them abroad. The jolting
here was most distressing, and seemed about to snap
the springs.
‘How that wheel do wamble,’
said Molly at last. She had scarcely spoken
when the wheel came off, and all three were precipitated
over it into the road.
Fortunately the horse stood still,
and they began to gather themselves up. The
only one of the three who had suffered in the least
from the fall was Anne, and she was only conscious
of a severe shaking which had half stupefied her for
the time. The wheel lay flat in the road, so
that there was no possibility of driving further in
their present plight. They looked around for
help. The only friendly object near was a lonely
cottage, from its situation evidently the home of a
shepherd.
The horse was unharnessed and tied
to the back of the gig, and the three women went across
to the house. On getting close they found that
the shutters of all the lower windows were closed,
but on trying the door it opened to the hand.
Nobody was within; the house appeared to have been
abandoned in some confusion, and the probability was
that the shepherd had fled on hearing the alarm.
Anne now said that she felt the effects of her fall
too severely to be able to go any further just then,
and it was agreed that she should be left there while
Mrs. Loveday and Molly went on for assistance, the
elder lady deeming Molly too young and vacant-minded
to be trusted to go alone. Molly suggested taking
the horse, as the distance might be great, each of
them sitting alternately on his back while the other
led him by the head. This they did, Anne watching
them vanish down the white and lumpy road.
She then looked round the room, as
well as she could do so by the light from the open
door. It was plain, from the shutters being closed,
that the shepherd had left his house before daylight,
the candle and extinguisher on the table pointing
to the same conclusion. Here she remained, her
eyes occasionally sweeping the bare, sunny expanse
of down, that was only relieved from absolute emptiness
by the overturned gig hard by. The sheep seemed
to have gone away, and scarcely a bird flew across
to disturb the solitude. Anne had risen early
that morning, and leaning back in the withy chair,
which she had placed by the door, she soon fell into
an uneasy doze, from which she was awakened by the
distant tramp of a horse. Feeling much recovered
from the effects of the overturn, she eagerly rose
and looked out. The horse was not Miller Loveday’s,
but a powerful bay, bearing a man in full yeomanry
uniform.
Anne did not wait to recognize further;
instantly re-entering the house, she shut the door
and bolted it. In the dark she sat and listened:
not a sound. At the end of ten minutes, thinking
that the rider if he were not Festus had carelessly
passed by, or that if he were Festus he had not seen
her, she crept softly upstairs and peeped out of the
window. Excepting the spot of shade, formed by
the gig as before, the down was quite bare.
She then opened the casement and stretched out her
neck.
’Ha, young madam! There
you are! I knew ‘ee! Now you are
caught!’ came like a clap of thunder from a
point three or four feet beneath her, and turning
down her frightened eyes she beheld Festus Derriman
lurking close to the wall. His attention had
first been attracted by her shutting the door of the
cottage; then by the overturned gig; and after making
sure, by examining the vehicle, that he was not mistaken
in her identity, he had dismounted, led his horse
round to the side, and crept up to entrap her.
Anne started back into the room, and
remained still as a stone. Festus went on-’Come,
you must trust to me. The French have landed.
I have been trying to meet with you every hour since
that confounded trick you played me. You threw
me into the water. Faith, it was well for you
I didn’t catch ye then! I should have
taken a revenge in a better way than I shall now.
I mean to have that kiss of ye. Come, Miss Nancy;
do you hear?-’Tis no use for you
to lurk inside there. You’ll have to turn
out as soon as Boney comes over the hill-Are
you going to open the door, I say, and speak to me
in a civil way? What do you think I am, then,
that you should barricade yourself against me as if
I was a wild beast or Frenchman? Open the door,
or put out your head, or do something; or ’pon
my soul I’ll break in the door!’
It occurred to Anne at this point
of the tirade that the best policy would be to temporize
till somebody should return, and she put out her head
and face, now grown somewhat pale.
‘That’s better,’
said Festus. ’Now I can talk to you.
Come, my dear, will you open the door? Why
should you be afraid of me?’
‘I am not altogether afraid
of you; I am safe from the French here,’ said
Anne, not very truthfully, and anxiously casting her
eyes over the vacant down.
’Then let me tell you that the
alarm is false, and that no landing has been attempted.
Now will you open the door and let me in? I
am tired. I have been on horseback ever since
daylight, and have come to bring you the good tidings.’
Anne looked as if she doubted the news.
‘Come,’ said Festus.
‘No, I cannot let you in,’ she murmured,
after a pause.
‘Dash my wig, then,’ he
cried, his face flaming up, ’I’ll find
a way to get in! Now, don’t you provoke
me! You don’t know what I am capable of.
I ask you again, will you open the door?’
‘Why do you wish it?’ she said faintly.
‘I have told you I want to sit down; and I want
to ask you a question.’
‘You can ask me from where you are.’
’I cannot ask you properly.
It is about a serious matter: whether you will
accept my heart and hand. I am not going to throw
myself at your feet; but I ask you to do your duty
as a woman, namely, give your solemn word to take
my name as soon as the war is over and I have time
to attend to you. I scorn to ask it of a haughty
hussy who will only speak to me through a window;
however, I put it to you for the last time, madam.’
There was no sign on the down of anybody’s
return, and she said, ’I’ll think of it,
sir.’
’You have thought of it long
enough; I want to know. Will you or won’t
you?’
‘Very well; I think I will.’
And then she felt that she might be buying personal
safety too dearly by shuffling thus, since he would
spread the report that she had accepted him, and cause
endless complication. ‘No,’ she
said, ‘I have changed my mind. I cannot
accept you, Mr. Derriman.’
‘That’s how you play with
me!’ he exclaimed, stamping. ’"Yes,”
one moment; “No,” the next. Come,
you don’t know what you refuse. That old
hall is my uncle’s own, and he has nobody else
to leave it to. As soon as he’s dead I
shall throw up farming and start as a squire.
And now,’ he added with a bitter sneer, ’what
a fool you are to hang back from such a chance!’
‘Thank you, I don’t value it,’ said
Anne.
‘Because you hate him who would make it yours?’
‘It may not lie in your power to do that.’
‘What-has the old fellow been telling
you his affairs?’
‘No.’
’Then why do you mistrust me?
Now, after this will you open the door, and show
that you treat me as a friend if you won’t accept
me as a lover? I only want to sit and talk to
you.’
Anne thought she would trust him;
it seemed almost impossible that he could harm her.
She retired from the window and went downstairs.
When her hand was upon the bolt of the door, her
mind misgave her. Instead of withdrawing it
she remained in silence where she was, and he began
again-
‘Are you going to unfasten it?’
Anne did not speak.
’Now, dash my wig, I will get
at you! You’ve tried me beyond endurance.
One kiss would have been enough that day in the mead;
now I’ll have forty, whether you will or no!’
He flung himself against the door;
but as it was bolted, and had in addition a great
wooden bar across it, this produced no effect.
He was silent for a moment, and then the terrified
girl heard him attempt the shuttered window.
She ran upstairs and again scanned the down.
The yellow gig still lay in the blazing sunshine,
and the horse of Festus stood by the corner of the
garden-nothing else was to be seen.
At this moment there came to her ear the noise of
a sword drawn from its scabbard; and, peeping over
the window-sill, she saw her tormentor drive his sword
between the joints of the shutters, in an attempt to
rip them open. The sword snapped off in his
hand. With an imprecation he pulled out the
piece, and returned the two halves to the scabbard.
‘Ha! ha!’ he cried, catching
sight of the top of her head. ’’Tis only
a joke, you know; but I’ll get in all the same.
All for a kiss! But never mind, we’ll
do it yet!’ He spoke in an affectedly light
tone, as if ashamed of his previous resentful temper;
but she could see by the livid back of his neck that
he was brimful of suppressed passion. ’Only
a jest, you know,’ he went on. ’How
are we going to do it now? Why, in this way.
I go and get a ladder, and enter at the upper window
where my love is. And there’s the ladder
lying under that corn-rick in the first enclosed field.
Back in two minutes, dear!’
He ran off, and was lost to her view.