CHAPTER I - HOW HIS COLD WAS CURED
Something delayed the arrival of the
Wesleyan minister, and a young man came temporarily
in his stead. It was on the thirteenth of January
183- that Mr. Stockdale, the young man in question,
made his humble entry into the village, unknown, and
almost unseen. But when those of the inhabitants
who styled themselves of his connection became acquainted
with him, they were rather pleased with the substitute
than otherwise, though he had scarcely as yet acquired
ballast of character sufficient to steady the consciences
of the hundred-and-forty Methodists of pure blood
who, at this time, lived in Nether-Moynton, and to
give in addition supplementary support to the mixed
race which went to church in the morning and chapel
in the evening, or when there was a tea as
many as a hundred-and-ten people more, all told, and
including the parish-clerk in the winter-time, when
it was too dark for the vicar to observe who passed
up the street at seven o’clock which,
to be just to him, he was never anxious to do.
It was owing to this overlapping of
creeds that the celebrated population-puzzle arose
among the denser gentry of the district around Nether-Moynton:
how could it be that a parish containing fifteen score
of strong full-grown Episcopalians, and nearly thirteen
score of well-matured Dissenters, numbered barely
two-and-twenty score adults in all?
The young man being personally interesting,
those with whom he came in contact were content to
waive for a while the graver question of his sufficiency.
It is said that at this time of his life his eyes
were affectionate, though without a ray of levity;
that his hair was curly, and his figure tall; that
he was, in short, a very lovable youth, who won upon
his female hearers as soon as they saw and heard him,
and caused them to say, ’Why didn’t we
know of this before he came, that we might have gied
him a warmer welcome!’
The fact was that, knowing him to
be only provisionally selected, and expecting nothing
remarkable in his person or doctrine, they and the
rest of his flock in Nether-Moynton had felt almost
as indifferent about his advent as if they had been
the soundest church-going parishioners in the country,
and he their true and appointed parson. Thus
when Stockdale set foot in the place nobody had secured
a lodging for him, and though his journey had given
him a bad cold in the head, he was forced to attend
to that business himself. On inquiry he learnt
that the only possible accommodation in the village
would be found at the house of one Mrs. Lizzy Newberry,
at the upper end of the street.
It was a youth who gave this information,
and Stockdale asked him who Mrs. Newberry might be.
The boy said that she was a widow-woman,
who had got no husband, because he was dead.
Mr. Newberry, he added, had been a well-to-do man
enough, as the saying was, and a farmer; but he had
gone off in a decline. As regarded Mrs. Newberry’s
serious side, Stockdale gathered that she was one
of the trimmers who went to church and chapel
both.
‘I’ll go there,’
said Stockdale, feeling that, in the absence of purely
sectarian lodgings, he could do no better.
’She’s a little particular,
and won’t hae gover’ment folks, or curates,
or the pa’son’s friends, or such like,’
said the lad dubiously.
’Ah, that may be a promising
sign: I’ll call. Or no; just you go
up and ask first if she can find room for me.
I have to see one or two persons on another matter.
You will find me down at the carrier’s.’
In a quarter of an hour the lad came
back, and said that Mrs. Newberry would have no objection
to accommodate him, whereupon Stockdale called at
the house.
It stood within a garden-hedge, and
seemed to be roomy and comfortable. He saw an
elderly woman, with whom he made arrangements to come
the same night, since there was no inn in the place,
and he wished to house himself as soon as possible;
the village being a local centre from which he was
to radiate at once to the different small chapels in
the neighbourhood. He forthwith sent his luggage
to Mrs. Newberry’s from the carrier’s,
where he had taken shelter, and in the evening walked
up to his temporary home.
As he now lived there, Stockdale felt
it unnecessary to knock at the door; and entering
quietly he had the pleasure of hearing footsteps scudding
away like mice into the back quarters. He advanced
to the parlour, as the front room was called, though
its stone floor was scarcely disguised by the carpet,
which only over-laid the trodden areas, leaving sandy
deserts under the bulging mouldings of the table-legs,
playing with brass furniture. But the room looked
snug and cheerful. The firelight shone out brightly,
trembling on the knobs and handles, and lurking in
great strength on the under surface of the chimney-piece.
A deep arm-chair, covered with horsehair, and studded
with a countless throng of brass nails, was pulled
up on one side of the fireplace. The tea-things
were on the table, the teapot cover was open, and a
little hand-bell had been laid at that precise point
towards which a person seated in the great chair might
be expected instinctively to stretch his hand.
Stockdale sat down, not objecting
to his experience of the room thus far, and began
his residence by tinkling the bell. A little
girl crept in at the summons, and made tea for him.
Her name, she said, was Marther Sarer, and she lived
out there, nodding towards the road and village generally.
Before Stockdale had got far with his meal, a tap
sounded on the door behind him, and on his telling
the inquirer to come in, a rustle of garments caused
him to turn his head. He saw before him a fine
and extremely well-made young woman, with dark hair,
a wide, sensible, beautiful forehead, eyes that warmed
him before he knew it, and a mouth that was in itself
a picture to all appreciative souls.
‘Can I get you anything else
for tea?’ she said, coming forward a step or
two, an expression of liveliness on her features, and
her hand waving the door by its edge.
‘Nothing, thank you,’
said Stockdale, thinking less of what he replied than
of what might be her relation to the household.
‘You are quite sure?’
said the young woman, apparently aware that he had
not considered his answer.
He conscientiously examined the tea-things,
and found them all there. ‘Quite sure,
Miss Newberry,’ he said.
‘It is Mrs. Newberry,’
she said. ’Lizzy Newberry, I used to be
Lizzy Simpkins.’
‘O, I beg your pardon, Mrs.
Newberry.’ And before he had occasion to
say more she left the room.
Stockdale remained in some doubt till
Martha Sarah came to clear the table. ‘Whose
house is this, my little woman,’ said he.
‘Mrs. Lizzy Newberry’s, sir.’
‘Then Mrs. Newberry is not the old lady I saw
this afternoon?’
’No. That’s Mrs.
Newberry’s mother. It was Mrs. Newberry
who comed in to you just by now, because she wanted
to see if you was good-looking.’
Later in the evening, when Stockdale
was about to begin supper, she came again. ‘I
have come myself, Mr. Stockdale,’ she said.
The minister stood up in acknowledgment of the honour.
’I am afraid little Marther might not make
you understand. What will you have for supper? there’s
cold rabbit, and there’s a ham uncut.’
Stockdale said he could get on nicely
with those viands, and supper was laid. He had
no more than cut a slice when tap-tap came to the door
again. The minister had already learnt that this
particular rhythm in taps denoted the fingers of his
enkindling landlady, and the doomed young fellow buried
his first mouthful under a look of receptive blandness.
’We have a chicken in the house,
Mr. Stockdale I quite forgot to mention
it just now. Perhaps you would like Marther Sarer
to bring it up?’
Stockdale had advanced far enough
in the art of being a young man to say that he did
not want the chicken, unless she brought it up herself;
but when it was uttered he blushed at the daring gallantry
of the speech, perhaps a shade too strong for a serious
man and a minister. In three minutes the chicken
appeared, but, to his great surprise, only in the
hands of Martha Sarah. Stockdale was disappointed,
which perhaps it was intended that he should be.
He had finished supper, and was not
in the least anticipating Mrs. Newberry again that
night, when she tapped and entered as before.
Stockdale’s gratified look told that she had
lost nothing by not appearing when expected.
It happened that the cold in the head from which
the young man suffered had increased with the approach
of night, and before she had spoken he was seized
with a violent fit of sneezing which he could not
anyhow repress.
Mrs. Newberry looked full of pity.
’Your cold is very bad to-night, Mr. Stockdale.’
Stockdale replied that it was rather troublesome.
’And I’ve a good mind’ she
added archly, looking at the cheerless glass of water
on the table, which the abstemious minister was going
to drink.
‘Yes, Mrs. Newberry?’
’I’ve a good mind that
you should have something more likely to cure it than
that cold stuff.’
‘Well,’ said Stockdale,
looking down at the glass, ’as there is no inn
here, and nothing better to be got in the village,
of course it will do.’
To this she replied, ’There
is something better, not far off, though not in the
house. I really think you must try it, or you
may be ill. Yes, Mr. Stockdale, you shall.’
She held up her finger, seeing that he was about
to speak. ‘Don’t ask what it is;
wait, and you shall see.’
Lizzy went away, and Stockdale waited
in a pleasant mood. Presently she returned with
her bonnet and cloak on, saying, ’I am so sorry,
but you must help me to get it. Mother has gone
to bed. Will you wrap yourself up, and come
this way, and please bring that cup with you?’
Stockdale, a lonely young fellow,
who had for weeks felt a great craving for somebody
on whom to throw away superfluous interest, and even
tenderness, was not sorry to join her; and followed
his guide through the back door, across the garden,
to the bottom, where the boundary was a wall.
This wall was low, and beyond it Stockdale discerned
in the night shades several grey headstones, and the
outlines of the church roof and tower.
‘It is easy to get up this way,’
she said, stepping upon a bank which abutted on the
wall; then putting her foot on the top of the stonework,
and descending a spring inside, where the ground was
much higher, as is the manner of graveyards to be.
Stockdale did the same, and followed her in the dusk
across the irregular ground till they came to the tower
door, which, when they had entered, she softly closed
behind them.
‘You can keep a secret?’ she said, in
a musical voice.
‘Like an iron chest!’ said he fervently.
Then from under her cloak she produced
a small lighted lantern, which the minister had not
noticed that she carried at all. The light showed
them to be close to the singing-gallery stairs, under
which lay a heap of lumber of all sorts, but consisting
mostly of decayed framework, pews, panels, and pieces
of flooring, that from time to time had been removed
from their original fixings in the body of the edifice
and replaced by new.
‘Perhaps you will drag some
of those boards aside?’ she said, holding the
lantern over her head to light him better. ’Or
will you take the lantern while I move them?’
‘I can manage it,’ said
the young man, and acting as she ordered, he uncovered,
to his surprise, a row of little barrels bound with
wood hoops, each barrel being about as large as the
nave of a heavy waggon-wheel.
When they were laid open Lizzy fixed
her eyes on him, as if she wondered what he would
say.
‘You know what they are?’
she asked, finding that he did not speak.
‘Yes, barrels,’ said Stockdale
simply. He was an inland man, the son of highly
respectable parents, and brought up with a single eye
to the ministry; and the sight suggested nothing beyond
the fact that such articles were there.
‘You are quite right, they are
barrels,’ she said, in an emphatic tone of candour
that was not without a touch of irony.
Stockdale looked at her with an eye
of sudden misgiving. ‘Not smugglers’
liquor?’ he said.
‘Yes,’ said she.
’They are tubs of spirit that have accidentally
come over in the dark from France.’
In Nether-Moynton and its vicinity
at this date people always smiled at the sort of sin
called in the outside world illicit trading; and these
little kegs of gin and brandy were as well known to
the inhabitants as turnips. So that Stockdale’s
innocent ignorance, and his look of alarm when he
guessed the sinister mystery, seemed to strike Lizzy
first as ludicrous, and then as very awkward for the
good impression that she wished to produce upon him.
‘Smuggling is carried on here
by some of the people,’ she said in a gentle,
apologetic voice. ’It has been their practice
for generations, and they think it no harm.
Now, will you roll out one of the tubs?’
‘What to do with it?’ said the minister.
‘To draw a little from it to
cure your cold,’ she answered. ’It
is so ’nation strong that it drives away that
sort of thing in a jiffy. O, it is all right
about our taking it. I may have what I like;
the owner of the tubs says so. I ought to have
had some in the house, and then I shouldn’t
ha’ been put to this trouble; but I drink none
myself, and so I often forget to keep it indoors.’
’You are allowed to help yourself,
I suppose, that you may not inform where their hiding-place
is?’
’Well, no; not that particularly;
but I may take any if I want it. So help yourself.’
‘I will, to oblige you, since
you have a right to it,’ murmured the minister;
and though he was not quite satisfied with his part
in the performance, he rolled one of the ‘tubs’
out from the corner into the middle of the tower floor.
’How do you wish me to get it out with
a gimlet, I suppose?’
‘No, I’ll show you,’
said his interesting companion; and she held up with
her other hand a shoemaker’s awl and a hammer.
’You must never do these things with a gimlet,
because the wood-dust gets in; and when the buyers
pour out the brandy that would tell them that the tub
had been broached. An awl makes no dust, and
the hole nearly closes up again. Now tap one
of the hoops forward.’
Stockdale took the hammer and did so.
‘Now make the hole in the part that was covered
by the hoop.’
He made the hole as directed. ‘It won’t
run out,’ he said.
‘O yes it will,’ said
she. ’Take the tub between your knees,
and squeeze the heads; and I’ll hold the cup.’
Stockdale obeyed; and the pressure
taking effect upon the tub, which seemed, to be thin,
the spirit spirted out in a stream. When the
cup was full he ceased pressing, and the flow immediately
stopped. ’Now we must fill up the keg
with water,’ said Lizzy, ’or it will cluck
like forty hens when it is handled, and show that
‘tis not full.’
‘But they tell you you may take it?’
’Yes, the smugglers: but
the buyers must not know that the smugglers have been
kind to me at their expense.’
‘I see,’ said Stockdale
doubtfully. ’I much question the honesty
of this proceeding.’
By her direction he held the tub with
the hole upwards, and while he went through the process
of alternately pressing and ceasing to press, she
produced a bottle of water, from which she took mouthfuls,
conveying each to the keg by putting her pretty lips
to the hole, where it was sucked in at each recovery
of the cask from pressure. When it was again
full he plugged the hole, knocked the hoop down to
its place, and buried the tub in the lumber as before.
‘Aren’t the smugglers
afraid that you will tell?’ he asked, as they
recrossed the churchyard.
‘O no; they are not afraid of
that. I couldn’t do such a thing.’
‘They have put you into a very
awkward corner,’ said Stockdale emphatically.
’You must, of course, as an honest person, sometimes
feel that it is your duty to inform really
you must.’
’Well, I have never particularly
felt it as a duty; and, besides, my first husband ’
She stopped, and there was some confusion in her voice.
Stockdale was so honest and unsophisticated that he
did not at once discern why she paused: but at
last he did perceive that the words were a slip, and
that no woman would have uttered ‘first husband’
by accident unless she had thought pretty frequently
of a second. He felt for her confusion, and
allowed her time to recover and proceed. ‘My
husband,’ she said, in a self-corrected tone,
’used to know of their doings, and so did my
father, and kept the secret. I cannot inform,
in fact, against anybody.’
‘I see the hardness of it,’
he continued, like a man who looked far into the moral
of things. ’And it is very cruel that you
should be tossed and tantalized between your memories
and your conscience. I do hope, Mrs. Newberry,
that you will soon see your way out of this unpleasant
position.’
‘Well, I don’t just now,’ she murmured.
By this time they had passed over
the wall and entered the house, where she brought
him a glass and hot water, and left him to his own
reflections. He looked after her vanishing form,
asking himself whether he, as a respectable man, and
a minister, and a shining light, even though as yet
only of the halfpenny-candle sort, were quite justified
in doing this thing. A sneeze settled the question;
and he found that when the fiery liquor was lowered
by the addition of twice or thrice the quantity of
water, it was one of the prettiest cures for a cold
in the head that he had ever known, particularly at
this chilly time of the year.
Stockdale sat in the deep chair about
twenty minutes sipping and meditating, till he at
length took warmer views of things, and longed for
the morrow, when he would see Mrs. Newberry again.
He then felt that, though chronologically at a short
distance, it would in an emotional sense be very long
before to-morrow came, and walked restlessly round
the room. His eye was attracted by a framed
and glazed sampler in which a running ornament of
fir-trees and peacocks surrounded the following pretty
bit of sentiment:-
’Rose-leaves smell when roses
thrive,
Here’s my work while I’m
alive;
Rose-leaves smell when shrunk and
shed,
Here’s my work when I am dead.
’Lizzy Simpkins. Fear
God. Honour the King.
’Aged 11 years.
‘’Tis hers,’ he
said to himself. ‘Heavens, how I like that
name!’
Before he had done thinking that no
other name from Abigail to Zenobia would have suited
his young landlady so well, tap-tap came again upon
the door; and the minister started as her face appeared
yet another time, looking so disinterested that the
most ingenious would have refrained from asserting
that she had come to affect his feelings by her seductive
eyes.
’Would you like a fire in your
room, Mr. Stockdale, on account of your cold?’
The minister, being still a little
pricked in the conscience for countenancing her in
watering the spirits, saw here a way to self-chastisement.
‘No, I thank you,’ he said firmly; ’it
is not necessary. I have never been used to
one in my life, and it would be giving way to luxury
too far.’
‘Then I won’t insist,’
she said, and disconcerted him by vanishing instantly.
Wondering if she was vexed by his
refusal, he wished that he had chosen to have a fire,
even though it should have scorched him out of bed
and endangered his self-discipline for a dozen days.
However, he consoled himself with what was in truth
a rare consolation for a budding lover, that he was
under the same roof with Lizzy; her guest, in fact,
to take a poetical view of the term lodger; and that
he would certainly see her on the morrow.
The morrow came, and Stockdale rose
early, his cold quite gone. He had never in
his life so longed for the breakfast hour as he did
that day, and punctually at eight o’clock, after
a short walk, to reconnoitre the premises, he re-entered
the door of his dwelling. Breakfast passed, and
Martha Sarah attended, but nobody came voluntarily
as on the night before to inquire if there were other
wants which he had not mentioned, and which she would
attempt to gratify. He was disappointed, and
went out, hoping to see her at dinner. Dinner
time came; he sat down to the meal, finished it, lingered
on for a whole hour, although two new teachers were
at that moment waiting at the chapel-door to speak
to him by appointment. It was useless to wait
longer, and he slowly went his way down the lane,
cheered by the thought that, after all, he would see
her in the evening, and perhaps engage again in the
delightful tub-broaching in the neighbouring church
tower, which proceeding he resolved to render more
moral by steadfastly insisting that no water should
be introduced to fill up, though the tub should cluck
like all the hens in Christendom. But nothing
could disguise the fact that it was a queer business;
and his countenance fell when he thought how much
more his mind was interested in that matter than in
his serious duties.
However, compunction vanished with
the decline of day. Night came, and his tea
and supper; but no Lizzy Newberry, and no sweet temptations.
At last the minister could bear it no longer, and
said to his quaint little attendant, ‘Where
is Mrs. Newberry to-day?’ judiciously handing
a penny as he spoke.
‘She’s busy,’ said Martha.
‘Anything serious happened?’
he asked, handing another penny, and revealing yet
additional pennies in the background.
‘O no nothing at
all!’ said she, with breathless confidence.
’Nothing ever happens to her. She’s
only biding upstairs in bed because ’tis her
way sometimes.’
Being a young man of some honour,
he would not question further, and assuming that Lizzy
must have a bad headache, or other slight ailment,
in spite of what the girl had said, he went to bed
dissatisfied, not even setting eyes on old Mrs. Simpkins.
’I said last night that I should see her to-morrow,’
he reflected; ‘but that was not to be!’
Next day he had better fortune, or
worse, meeting her at the foot of the stairs in the
morning, and being favoured by a visit or two from
her during the day once for the purpose
of making kindly inquiries about his comfort, as on
the first evening, and at another time to place a bunch
of winter-violets on his table, with a promise to
renew them when they drooped. On these occasions
there was something in her smile which showed how
conscious she was of the effect she produced, though
it must be said that it was rather a humorous than
a designing consciousness, and savoured more of pride
than of vanity.
As for Stockdale, he clearly perceived
that he possessed unlimited capacity for backsliding,
and wished that tutelary saints were not denied to
Dissenters. He set a watch upon his tongue and
eyes for the space of one hour and a half, after which
he found it was useless to struggle further, and gave
himself up to the situation. ’The other
minister will be here in a month,’ he said to
himself when sitting over the fire. ’Then
I shall be off, and she will distract my mind no more!
. . . And then, shall I go on living by myself
for ever? No; when my two years of probation
are finished, I shall have a furnished house to live
in, with a varnished door and a brass knocker; and
I’ll march straight back to her, and ask her
flat, as soon as the last plate is on the dresser!
Thus a titillating fortnight was passed
by young Stockdale, during which time things proceeded
much as such matters have done ever since the beginning
of history. He saw the object of attachment several
times one day, did not see her at all the next, met
her when he least expected to do so, missed her when
hints and signs as to where she should be at a given
hour almost amounted to an appointment. This
mild coquetry was perhaps fair enough under the circumstances
of their being so closely lodged, and Stockdale put
up with it as philosophically as he was able.
Being in her own house, she could, after vexing him
or disappointing him of her presence, easily win him
back by suddenly surrounding him with those little
attentions which her position as his landlady put it
in her power to bestow. When he had waited indoors
half the day to see her, and on finding that she would
not be seen, had gone off in a huff to the dreariest
and dampest walk he could discover, she would restore
equilibrium in the evening with ’Mr. Stockdale,
I have fancied you must feel draught o’ nights
from your bedroom window, and so I have been putting
up thicker curtains this afternoon while you were out;’
or, ’I noticed that you sneezed twice again
this morning, Mr. Stockdale. Depend upon it
that cold is hanging about you yet; I am sure it is I
have thought of it continually; and you must let me
make a posset for you.’
Sometimes in coming home he found
his sitting-room rearranged, chairs placed where the
table had stood, and the table ornamented with the
few fresh flowers and leaves that could be obtained
at this season, so as to add a novelty to the room.
At times she would be standing on a chair outside
the house, trying to nail up a branch of the monthly
rose which the winter wind had blown down; and of
course he stepped forward to assist her, when their
hands got mixed in passing the shreds and nails.
Thus they became friends again after a disagreement.
She would utter on these occasions some pretty and
deprecatory remark on the necessity of her troubling
him anew; and he would straightway say that he would
do a hundred times as much for her if she should so
require.
CHAPTER II - HOW HE SAW TWO OTHER MEN
Matters being in this advancing state,
Stockdale was rather surprised one cloudy evening,
while sitting in his room, at hearing her speak in
low tones of expostulation to some one at the door.
It was nearly dark, but the shutters were not yet
closed, nor the candles lighted; and Stockdale was
tempted to stretch his head towards the window.
He saw outside the door a young man in clothes of
a whitish colour, and upon reflection judged their
wearer to be the well-built and rather handsome miller
who lived below. The miller’s voice was
alternately low and firm, and sometimes it reached
the level of positive entreaty; but what the words
were Stockdale could in no way hear.
Before the colloquy had ended, the
minister’s attention was attracted by a second
incident. Opposite Lizzy’s home grew a
clump of laurels, forming a thick and permanent shade.
One of the laurel boughs now quivered against the
light background of sky, and in a moment the head of
a man peered out, and remained still. He seemed
to be also much interested in the conversation at
the door, and was plainly lingering there to watch
and listen. Had Stockdale stood in any other
relation to Lizzy than that of a lover, he might have
gone out and investigated the meaning of this:
but being as yet but an unprivileged ally, he did
nothing more than stand up and show himself against
the firelight, whereupon the listener disappeared,
and Lizzy and the miller spoke in lower tones.
Stockdale was made so uneasy by the
circumstance, that as soon as the miller was gone,
he said, ’Mrs. Newberry, are you aware that you
were watched just now, and your conversation heard?’
‘When?’ she said.
’When you were talking to that
miller. A man was looking from the laurel-tree
as jealously as if he could have eaten you.’
She showed more concern than the trifling
event seemed to demand, and he added, ’Perhaps
you were talking of things you did not wish to be
overheard?’
‘I was talking only on business,’ she
said.
‘Lizzy, be frank!’ said
the young man. ’If it was only on business,
why should anybody wish to listen to you?’
She looked curiously at him.
‘What else do you think it could be, then?’
’Well the only talk
between a young woman and man that is likely to amuse
an eavesdropper.’
‘Ah yes,’ she said, smiling
in spite of her preoccupation. ’Well, my
cousin Owlett has spoken to me about matrimony, every
now and then, that’s true; but he was not speaking
of it then. I wish he had been speaking of it,
with all my heart. It would have been much less
serious for me.’
‘O Mrs. Newberry!’
‘It would. Not that I
should ha’ chimed in with him, of course.
I wish it for other reasons. I am glad, Mr.
Stockdale, that you have told me of that listener.
It is a timely warning, and I must see my cousin again.’
‘But don’t go away till
I have spoken,’ said the minister. ’I’ll
out with it at once, and make no more ado. Let
it be Yes or No between us, Lizzy; please do!’
And he held out his hand, in which she freely allowed
her own to rest, but without speaking.
‘You mean Yes by that?’ he asked, after
waiting a while.
‘You may be my sweetheart, if you will.’
’Why not say at once you will
wait for me until I have a house and can come back
to marry you.’
‘Because I am thinking thinking
of something else,’ she said with embarrassment.
’It all comes upon me at once, and I must settle
one thing at a time.’
’At any rate, dear Lizzy, you
can assure me that the miller shall not be allowed
to speak to you except on business? You have never
directly encouraged him?’
She parried the question by saying,
’You see, he and his party have been in the
habit of leaving things on my premises sometimes, and
as I have not denied him, it makes him rather forward.’
‘Things what things?’
‘Tubs they are called Things here.’
‘But why don’t you deny him, my dear Lizzy?’
‘I cannot well.’
’You are too timid. It
is unfair of him to impose so upon you, and get your
good name into danger by his smuggling tricks.
Promise me that the next time he wants to leave his
tubs here you will let me roll them into the street?’
She shook her head. ’I
would not venture to offend the neighbours so much
as that,’ said she, ’or do anything that
would be so likely to put poor Owlett into the hands
of the excisemen.’
Stockdale sighed, and said that he
thought hers a mistaken generosity when it extended
to assisting those who cheated the king of his dues.
’At any rate, you will let me make him keep
his distance as your lover, and tell him flatly that
you are not for him?’
‘Please not, at present,’
she said. ’I don’t wish to offend
my old neighbours. It is not only Owlett who
is concerned.’
‘This is too bad,’ said Stockdale impatiently.
‘On my honour, I won’t
encourage him as my lover,’ Lizzy answered earnestly.
‘A reasonable man will be satisfied with that.’
‘Well, so I am,’ said Stockdale, his countenance
clearing.
CHAPTER III - THE MYSTERIOUS GREATCOAT
Stockdale now began to notice more
particularly a feature in the life of his fair landlady,
which he had casually observed but scarcely ever thought
of before. It was that she was markedly irregular
in her hours of rising. For a week or two she
would be tolerably punctual, reaching the ground-floor
within a few minutes of half-past seven. Then
suddenly she would not be visible till twelve at noon,
perhaps for three or four days in succession; and
twice he had certain proof that she did not leave
her room till half-past three in the afternoon.
The second time that this extreme lateness came under
his notice was on a day when he had particularly wished
to consult with her about his future movements; and
he concluded, as he always had done, that she had a
cold, headache, or other ailment, unless she had kept
herself invisible to avoid meeting and talking to
him, which he could hardly believe. The former
supposition was disproved, however, by her innocently
saying, some days later, when they were speaking on
a question of health, that she had never had a moment’s
heaviness, headache, or illness of any kind since the
previous January twelvemonth.
‘I am glad to hear it,’
said he. ‘I thought quite otherwise.’
‘What, do I look sickly?’
she asked, turning up her face to show the impossibility
of his gazing on it and holding such a belief for a
moment.
’Not at all; I merely thought
so from your being sometimes obliged to keep your
room through the best part of the day.’
‘O, as for that it
means nothing,’ she murmured, with a look which
some might have called cold, and which was the worst
look that he liked to see upon her. ‘It
is pure sleepiness, Mr. Stockdale.’
‘Never!’
’It is, I tell you. When
I stay in my room till half-past three in the afternoon,
you may always be sure that I slept soundly till three,
or I shouldn’t have stayed there.’
‘It is dreadful,’ said
Stockdale, thinking of the disastrous effects of such
indulgence upon the household of a minister, should
it become a habit of everyday occurrence.
‘But then,’ she said,
divining his good and prescient thoughts, ’it
only happens when I stay awake all night. I
don’t go to sleep till five or six in the morning
sometimes.’
‘Ah, that’s another matter,’
said Stockdale. ’Sleeplessness to such
an alarming extent is real illness. Have you
spoken to a doctor?’
‘O no there is no
need for doing that it is all natural to
me.’ And she went away without further
remark.
Stockdale might have waited a long
time to know the real cause of her sleeplessness,
had it not happened that one dark night he was sitting
in his bedroom jotting down notes for a sermon, which
occupied him perfunctorily for a considerable time
after the other members of the household had retired.
He did not get to bed till one o’clock.
Before he had fallen asleep he heard a knocking at
the front door, first rather timidly performed, and
then louder. Nobody answered it, and the person
knocked again. As the house still remained undisturbed,
Stockdale got out of bed, went to his window, which
overlooked the door, and opening it, asked who was
there.
A young woman’s voice replied
that Susan Wallis was there, and that she had come
to ask if Mrs. Newberry could give her some mustard
to make a plaster with, as her father was taken very
ill on the chest.
The minister, having neither bell
nor servant, was compelled to act in person.
‘I will call Mrs. Newberry,’ he said.
Partly dressing himself; he went along the passage
and tapped at Lizzy’s door. She did not
answer, and, thinking of her erratic habits in the
matter of sleep, he thumped the door persistently,
when he discovered, by its moving ajar under his knocking,
that it had only been gently pushed to. As there
was now a sufficient entry for the voice, he knocked
no longer, but said in firm tones, ‘Mrs. Newberry,
you are wanted.’
The room was quite silent; not a breathing,
not a rustle, came from any part of it. Stockdale
now sent a positive shout through the open space of
the door: ’Mrs. Newberry!’ still
no answer, or movement of any kind within. Then
he heard sounds from the opposite room, that of Lizzy’s
mother, as if she had been aroused by his uproar though
Lizzy had not, and was dressing herself hastily.
Stockdale softly closed the younger woman’s
door and went on to the other, which was opened by
Mrs. Simpkins before he could reach it. She
was in her ordinary clothes, and had a light in her
hand.
‘What’s the person calling about?’
she said in alarm.
Stockdale told the girl’s errand,
adding seriously, ’I cannot wake Mrs. Newberry.’
‘It is no matter,’ said
her mother. ’I can let the girl have what
she wants as well as my daughter.’ And
she came out of the room and went downstairs.
Stockdale retired towards his own
apartment, saying, however, to Mrs. Simpkins from
the landing, as if on second thoughts, ’I suppose
there is nothing the matter with Mrs. Newberry, that
I could not wake her?’
‘O no,’ said the old lady hastily.
‘Nothing at all.’
Still the minister was not satisfied.
‘Will you go in and see?’ he said.
‘I should be much more at ease.’
Mrs. Simpkins returned up the staircase,
went to her daughter’s room, and came out again
almost instantly. ’There is nothing at
all the matter with Lizzy,’ she said; and descended
again to attend to the applicant, who, having seen
the light, had remained quiet during this interval.
Stockdale went into his room and lay
down as before. He heard Lizzy’s mother
open the front door, admit the girl, and then the murmured
discourse of both as they went to the store-cupboard
for the medicament required. The girl departed,
the door was fastened, Mrs. Simpkins came upstairs,
and the house was again in silence. Still the
minister did not fall asleep. He could not get
rid of a singular suspicion, which was all the more
harassing in being, if true, the most unaccountable
thing within his experience. That Lizzy Newberry
was in her bedroom when he made such a clamour at
the door he could not possibly convince himself; notwithstanding
that he had heard her come upstairs at the usual time,
go into her chamber, and shut herself up in the usual
way. Yet all reason was so much against her
being elsewhere, that he was constrained to go back
again to the unlikely theory of a heavy sleep, though
he had heard neither breath nor movement during a
shouting and knocking loud enough to rouse the Seven
Sleepers.
Before coming to any positive conclusion
he fell asleep himself, and did not awake till day.
He saw nothing of Mrs. Newberry in the morning, before
he went out to meet the rising sun, as he liked to
do when the weather was fine; but as this was by no
means unusual, he took no notice of it. At breakfast-time
he knew that she was not far off by hearing her in
the kitchen, and though he saw nothing of her person,
that back apartment being rigorously closed against
his eyes, she seemed to be talking, ordering, and
bustling about among the pots and skimmers in so ordinary
a manner, that there was no reason for his wasting
more time in fruitless surmise.
The minister suffered from these distractions,
and his extemporized sermons were not improved thereby.
Already he often said Romans for Corinthians in the
pulpit, and gave out hymns in strange cramped metres,
that hitherto had always been skipped, because the
congregation could not raise a tune to fit them.
He fully resolved that as soon as his few weeks of
stay approached their end he would cut the matter short,
and commit himself by proposing a definite engagement,
repenting at leisure if necessary.
With this end in view, he suggested
to her on the evening after her mysterious sleep that
they should take a walk together just before dark,
the latter part of the proposition being introduced
that they might return home unseen. She consented
to go; and away they went over a stile, to a shrouded
footpath suited for the occasion. But, in spite
of attempts on both sides, they were unable to infuse
much spirit into the ramble. She looked rather
paler than usual, and sometimes turned her head away.
‘Lizzy,’ said Stockdale
reproachfully, when they had walked in silence a long
distance.
‘Yes,’ said she.
‘You yawned much
my company is to you!’ He put it in that way,
but he was really wondering whether her yawn could
possibly have more to do with physical weariness from
the night before than mental weariness of that present
moment. Lizzy apologized, and owned that she
was rather tired, which gave him an opening for a
direct question on the point; but his modesty would
not allow him to put it to her; and he uncomfortably
resolved to wait.
The month of February passed with
alternations of mud and frost, rain and sleet, east
winds and north-westerly gales. The hollow places
in the ploughed fields showed themselves as pools
of water, which had settled there from the higher
levels, and had not yet found time to soak away.
The birds began to get lively, and a single thrush
came just before sunset each evening, and sang hopefully
on the large elm-tree which stood nearest to Mrs.
Newberry’s house. Cold blasts and brittle
earth had given place to an oozing dampness more unpleasant
in itself than frost; but it suggested coming spring,
and its unpleasantness was of a bearable kind.
Stockdale had been going to bring
about a practical understanding with Lizzy at least
half-a-dozen times; but, what with the mystery of her
apparent absence on the night of the neighbour’s
call, and her curious way of lying in bed at unaccountable
times, he felt a check within him whenever he wanted
to speak out. Thus they still lived on as indefinitely
affianced lovers, each of whom hardly acknowledged
the other’s claim to the name of chosen one.
Stockdale persuaded himself that his hesitation was
owing to the postponement of the ordained minister’s
arrival, and the consequent delay in his own departure,
which did away with all necessity for haste in his
courtship; but perhaps it was only that his discretion
was reasserting itself, and telling him that he had
better get clearer ideas of Lizzy before arranging
for the grand contract of his life with her.
She, on her part, always seemed ready to be urged
further on that question than he had hitherto attempted
to go; but she was none the less independent, and
to a degree which would have kept from flagging the
passion of a far more mutable man.
On the evening of the first of March
he went casually into his bedroom about dusk, and
noticed lying on a chair a greatcoat, hat, and breeches.
Having no recollection of leaving any clothes of his
own in that spot, he went and examined them as well
as he could in the twilight, and found that they did
not belong to him. He paused for a moment to
consider how they might have got there. He was
the only man living in the house; and yet these were
not his garments, unless he had made a mistake.
No, they were not his. He called up Martha
Sarah.
‘How did these things come in
my room?’ he said, flinging the objectionable
articles to the floor.
Martha said that Mrs. Newberry had
given them to her to brush, and that she had brought
them up there thinking they must be Mr. Stockdale’s,
as there was no other gentleman a-lodging there.
‘Of course you did,’ said
Stockdale. ’Now take them down to your
mis’ess, and say they are some clothes I have
found here and know nothing about.’
As the door was left open he heard
the conversation downstairs. ’How stupid!’
said Mrs. Newberry, in a tone of confusion. ’Why,
Marther Sarer, I did not tell you to take ’em
to Mr. Stockdale’s room?’
‘I thought they must be his
as they was so muddy,’ said Martha humbly.
’You should have left ’em
on the clothes-horse,’ said the young mistress
severely; and she came upstairs with the garments on
her arm, quickly passed Stockdale’s room, and
threw them forcibly into a closet at the end of a
passage. With this the incident ended, and the
house was silent again.
There would have been nothing remarkable
in finding such clothes in a widow’s house had
they been clean; or moth-eaten, or creased, or mouldy
from long lying by; but that they should be splashed
with recent mud bothered Stockdale a good deal.
When a young pastor is in the aspen stage of attachment,
and open to agitation at the merest trifles, a really
substantial incongruity of this complexion is a disturbing
thing. However, nothing further occurred at that
time; but he became watchful, and given to conjecture,
and was unable to forget the circumstance.
One morning, on looking from his window,
he saw Mrs. Newberry herself brushing the tails of
a long drab greatcoat, which, if he mistook not, was
the very same garment as the one that had adorned the
chair of his room. It was densely splashed up
to the hollow of the back with neighbouring Nether-Moynton
mud, to judge by its colour, the spots being distinctly
visible to him in the sunlight. The previous
day or two having been wet, the inference was irresistible
that the wearer had quite recently been walking some
considerable distance about the lanes and fields.
Stockdale opened the window and looked out, and Mrs.
Newberry turned her head. Her face became slowly
red; she never had looked prettier, or more incomprehensible,
he waved his hand affectionately, and said good-morning;
she answered with embarrassment, having ceased her
occupation on the instant that she saw him, and rolled
up the coat half-cleaned.
Stockdale shut the window. Some
simple explanation of her proceeding was doubtless
within the bounds of possibility; but he himself could
not think of one; and he wished that she had placed
the matter beyond conjecture by voluntarily saying
something about it there and then.
But, though Lizzy had not offered
an explanation at the moment, the subject was brought
forward by her at the next time of their meeting.
She was chatting to him concerning some other event,
and remarked that it happened about the time when
she was dusting some old clothes that had belonged
to her poor husband.
‘You keep them clean out of
respect to his memory?’ said Stockdale tentatively.
‘I air and dust them sometimes,’
she said, with the most charming innocence in the
world.
‘Do dead men come out of their
graves and walk in mud?’ murmured the minister,
in a cold sweat at the deception that she was practising.
‘What did you say?’ asked Lizzy.
‘Nothing, nothing,’ said
he mournfully. ’Mere words a
phrase that will do for my sermon next Sunday.’
It was too plain that Lizzy was unaware that he had
seen actual pedestrian splashes upon the skirts of
the tell-tale overcoat, and that she imagined him
to believe it had come direct from some chest or drawer.
The aspect of the case was now considerably
darker. Stockdale was so much depressed by it
that he did not challenge her explanation, or threaten
to go off as a missionary to benighted islanders, or
reproach her in any way whatever. He simply
parted from her when she had done talking, and lived
on in perplexity, till by degrees his natural manner
became sad and constrained.
CHAPTER IV - AT THE TIME OF THE NEW MOON
The following Thursday was changeable,
damp, and gloomy; and the night threatened to be windy
and unpleasant. Stockdale had gone away to Knollsea
in the morning, to be present at some commemoration
service there, and on his return he was met by the
attractive Lizzy in the passage. Whether influenced
by the tide of cheerfulness which had attended him
that day, or by the drive through the open air, or
whether from a natural disposition to let bygones
alone, he allowed himself to be fascinated into forgetfulness
of the greatcoat incident, and upon the whole passed
a pleasant evening; not so much in her society as within
sound of her voice, as she sat talking in the back
parlour to her mother, till the latter went to bed.
Shortly after this Mrs. Newberry retired, and then
Stockdale prepared to go upstairs himself. But
before he left the room he remained standing by the
dying embers awhile, thinking long of one thing and
another; and was only aroused by the flickering of
his candle in the socket as it suddenly declined and
went out. Knowing that there were a tinder-box,
matches, and another candle in his bedroom, he felt
his way upstairs without a light. On reaching
his chamber he laid his hand on every possible ledge
and corner for the tinderbox, but for a long time
in vain. Discovering it at length, Stockdale
produced a spark, and was kindling the brimstone,
when he fancied that he heard a movement in the passage.
He blew harder at the lint, the match flared up, and
looking by aid of the blue light through the door,
which had been standing open all this time, he was
surprised to see a male figure vanishing round the
top of the staircase with the evident intention of
escaping unobserved. The personage wore the clothes
which Lizzy had been brushing, and something in the
outline and gait suggested to the minister that the
wearer was Lizzy herself.
But he was not sure of this; and,
greatly excited, Stockdale determined to investigate
the mystery, and to adopt his own way for doing it.
He blew out the match without lighting the candle,
went into the passage, and proceeded on tiptoe towards
Lizzy’s room. A faint grey square of light
in the direction of the chamber-window as he approached
told him that the door was open, and at once suggested
that the occupant was gone. He turned and brought
down his fist upon the handrail of the staircase:
‘It was she; in her late husband’s coat
and hat!’
Somewhat relieved to find that there
was no intruder in the case, yet none the less surprised,
the minister crept down the stairs, softly put on
his boots, overcoat, and hat, and tried the front door.
It was fastened as usual: he went to the back
door, found this unlocked, and emerged into the garden.
The night was mild and moonless, and rain had lately
been falling, though for the present it had ceased.
There was a sudden dropping from the trees and bushes
every now and then, as each passing wind shook their
boughs. Among these sounds Stockdale heard the
faint fall of feet upon the road outside, and he guessed
from the step that it was Lizzy’s. He
followed the sound, and, helped by the circumstance
of the wind blowing from the direction in which the
pedestrian moved, he got nearly close to her, and kept
there, without risk of being overheard. While
he thus followed her up the street or lane, as it
might indifferently be called, there being more hedge
than houses on either side, a figure came forward
to her from one of the cottage doors. Lizzy
stopped; the minister stepped upon the grass and stopped
also.
‘Is that Mrs. Newberry?’
said the man who had come out, whose voice Stockdale
recognized as that of one of the most devout members
of his congregation.
‘It is,’ said Lizzy.
‘I be quite ready I’ve been
here this quarter-hour.’
‘Ah, John,’ said she,
’I have bad news; there is danger to-night for
our venture.’
‘And d’ye tell o’t! I dreamed
there might be.’
‘Yes,’ she said hurriedly;
’and you must go at once round to where the
chaps are waiting, and tell them they will not be wanted
till to-morrow night at the same time. I go
to burn the lugger off.’
‘I will,’ he said; and
instantly went off through a gate, Lizzy continuing
her way.
On she tripped at a quickening pace
till the lane turned into the turnpike-road, which
she crossed, and got into the track for Ringsworth.
Here she ascended the hill without the least hesitation,
passed the lonely hamlet of Holworth, and went down
the vale on the other side. Stockdale had never
taken any extensive walks in this direction, but he
was aware that if she persisted in her course much
longer she would draw near to the coast, which was
here between two and three miles distant from Nether-Moynton;
and as it had been about a quarter-past eleven o’clock
when they set out, her intention seemed to be to reach
the shore about midnight.
Lizzy soon ascended a small mound,
which Stockdale at the same time adroitly skirted
on the left; and a dull monotonous roar burst upon
his ear. The hillock was about fifty yards from
the top of the cliffs, and by day it apparently commanded
a full view of the bay. There was light enough
in the sky to show her disguised figure against it
when she reached the top, where she paused, and afterwards
sat down. Stockdale, not wishing on any account
to alarm her at this moment, yet desirous of being
near her, sank upon his hands and knees, crept a little
higher up, and there stayed still.
The wind was chilly, the ground damp,
and his position one in which he did not care to remain
long. However, before he had decided to leave
it, the young man heard voices behind him. What
they signified he did not know; but, fearing that
Lizzy was in danger, he was about to run forward and
warn her that she might be seen, when she crept to
the shelter of a little bush which maintained a precarious
existence in that exposed spot; and her form was absorbed
in its dark and stunted outline as if she had become
part of it. She had evidently heard the men as
well as he. They passed near him, talking in
loud and careless tones, which could be heard above
the uninterrupted washings of the sea, and which suggested
that they were not engaged in any business at their
own risk. This proved to be the fact: some
of their words floated across to him, and caused him
to forget at once the coldness of his situation.
‘What’s the vessel?’
‘A lugger, about fifty tons.’
‘From Cherbourg, I suppose?’
’Yes, ‘a b’lieve.’
‘But it don’t all belong to Owlett?’
’O no. He’s only
got a share. There’s another or two in
it a farmer and such like, but the names
I don’t know.’
The voices died away, and the heads
and shoulders of the men diminished towards the cliff,
and dropped out of sight.
‘My darling has been tempted
to buy a share by that unbeliever Owlett,’ groaned
the minister, his honest affection for Lizzy having
quickened to its intensest point during these moments
of risk to her person and name. ‘That’s
why she’s here,’ he said to himself.
’O, it will be the ruin of her!’
His perturbation was interrupted by
the sudden bursting out of a bright and increasing
light from the spot where Lizzy was in hiding.
A few seconds later, and before it had reached the
height of a blaze, he heard her rush past him down
the hollow like a stone from a sling, in the direction
of home. The light now flared high and wide,
and showed its position clearly. She had kindled
a bough of furze and stuck it into the bush under
which she had been crouching; the wind fanned the flame,
which crackled fiercely, and threatened to consume
the bush as well as the bough. Stockdale paused
just long enough to notice thus much, and then followed
rapidly the route taken by the young woman. His
intention was to overtake her, and reveal himself
as a friend; but run as he would he could see nothing
of her. Thus he flew across the open country
about Holworth, twisting his legs and ankles in unexpected
fissures and descents, till, on coming to the gate
between the downs and the road, he was forced to pause
to get breath. There was no audible movement
either in front or behind him, and he now concluded
that she had not outrun him, but that, hearing him
at her heels, and believing him one of the excise
party, she had hidden herself somewhere on the way,
and let him pass by.
He went on at a more leisurely pace
towards the village. On reaching the house he
found his surmise to be correct, for the gate was on
the latch, and the door unfastened, just as he had
left them. Stockdale closed the door behind
him, and waited silently in the passage. In about
ten minutes he heard the same light footstep that
he had heard in going out; it paused at the gate,
which opened and shut softly, and then the door-latch
was lifted, and Lizzy came in.
Stockdale went forward and said at
once, ’Lizzy, don’t be frightened.
I have been waiting up for you.’
She started, though she had recognized
the voice. ’It is Mr. Stockdale, isn’t
it?’ she said.
‘Yes,’ he answered, becoming
angry now that she was safe indoors, and not alarmed.
’And a nice game I’ve found you out in
to-night. You are in man’s clothes, and
I am ashamed of you!’
Lizzy could hardly find a voice to
answer this unexpected reproach.
‘I am only partly in man’s
clothes,’ she faltered, shrinking back to the
wall. ’It is only his greatcoat and hat
and breeches that I’ve got on, which is no harm,
as he was my own husband; and I do it only because
a cloak blows about so, and you can’t use your
arms. I have got my own dress under just the
same it is only tucked in! Will you
go away upstairs and let me pass? I didn’t
want you to see me at such a time as this!’
’But I have a right to see you!
How do you think there can be anything between us
now?’ Lizzy was silent. ‘You are
a smuggler,’ he continued sadly.
‘I have only a share in the run,’ she
said.
’That makes no difference.
Whatever did you engage in such a trade as that for,
and keep it such a secret from me all this time?’
’I don’t do it always.
I only do it in winter-time when ‘tis new moon.’
’Well, I suppose that’s
because it can’t be done anywhen else . . .
You have regularly upset me, Lizzy.’
‘I am sorry for that,’ Lizzy meekly replied.
‘Well now,’ said he more
tenderly, ’no harm is done as yet. Won’t
you for the sake of me give up this blamable and dangerous
practice altogether?’
‘I must do my best to save this
run,’ said she, getting rather husky in the
throat. ’I don’t want to give you
up you know that; but I don’t want
to lose my venture. I don’t know what to
do now! Why I have kept it so secret from you
is that I was afraid you would be angry if you knew.’
’I should think so! I
suppose if I had married you without finding this
out you’d have gone on with it just the same?’
’I don’t know. I
did not think so far ahead. I only went to-night
to burn the folks off, because we found that the excisemen
knew where the tubs were to be landed.’
‘It is a pretty mess to be in
altogether, is this,’ said the distracted young
minister. ‘Well, what will you do now?’
Lizzy slowly murmured the particulars
of their plan, the chief of which were that they meant
to try their luck at some other point of the shore
the next night; that three landing-places were always
agreed upon before the run was attempted, with the
understanding that, if the vessel was ‘burnt
off’ from the first point, which was Ringsworth,
as it had been by her to-night, the crew should attempt
to make the second, which was Lulstead Cove, on the
second night; and if there, too, danger threatened,
they should on the third night try the third place,
which was behind a headland further west.
‘Suppose the officers hinder
them landing there too?’ he said, his attention
to this interesting programme displacing for a moment
his concern at her share in it.
’Then we shan’t try anywhere
else all this dark that’s what we
call the time between moon and moon and
perhaps they’ll string the tubs to a stray-line,
and sink ’em a little-ways from shore, and take
the bearings; and then when they have a chance they’ll
go to creep for ’em.’
‘What’s that?’
’O, they’ll go out in
a boat and drag a creeper that’s a
grapnel along the bottom till it catch
hold of the stray-line.’
The minister stood thinking; and there
was no sound within doors but the tick of the clock
on the stairs, and the quick breathing of Lizzy, partly
from her walk and partly from agitation, as she stood
close to the wall, not in such complete darkness but
that he could discern against its whitewashed surface
the greatcoat and broad hat which covered her.
‘Lizzy, all this is very wrong,’
he said. ’Don’t you remember the
lesson of the tribute-money? “Render unto
Cæsar the things that are Caesar’s.”
Surely you have heard that read times enough in your
growing up?’
‘He’s dead,’ she pouted.
‘But the spirit of the text is in force just
the same.’
’My father did it, and so did
my grandfather, and almost everybody in Nether-Moynton
lives by it, and life would be so dull if it wasn’t
for that, that I should not care to live at all.’
‘I am nothing to live for, of
course,’ he replied bitterly. ’You
would not think it worth while to give up this wild
business and live for me alone?’
‘I have never looked at it like that.’
‘And you won’t promise and wait till I
am ready?’
‘I cannot give you my word to-night.’
And, looking thoughtfully down, she gradually moved
and moved away, going into the adjoining room, and
closing the door between them. She remained there
in the dark till he was tired of waiting, and had
gone up to his own chamber.
Poor Stockdale was dreadfully depressed
all the next day by the discoveries of the night before.
Lizzy was unmistakably a fascinating young woman,
but as a minister’s wife she was hardly to be
contemplated. ’If I had only stuck to father’s
little grocery business, instead of going in for the
ministry, she would have suited me beautifully!’
he said sadly, until he remembered that in that case
he would never have come from his distant home to
Nether-Moynton, and never have known her.
The estrangement between them was
not complete, but it was sufficient to keep them out
of each other’s company. Once during the
day he met her in the garden-path, and said, turning
a reproachful eye upon her, ’Do you promise,
Lizzy?’ But she did not reply. The evening
drew on, and he knew well enough that Lizzy would
repeat her excursion at night her half-offended
manner had shown that she had not the slightest intention
of altering her plans at present. He did not
wish to repeat his own share of the adventure; but,
act as he would, his uneasiness on her account increased
with the decline of day. Supposing that an accident
should befall her, he would never forgive himself
for not being there to help, much as he disliked the
idea of seeming to countenance such unlawful escapades.
CHAPTER V - HOW THEY WENT TO LULSTEAD COVE
As he had expected, she left the house
at the same hour at night, this time passing his door
without stealth, as if she knew very well that he
would be watching, and were resolved to brave his displeasure.
He was quite ready, opened the door quickly, and
reached the back door almost as soon as she.
‘Then you will go, Lizzy?’
he said as he stood on the step beside her, who now
again appeared as a little man with a face altogether
unsuited to his clothes.
‘I must,’ she said, repressed by his stern
manner.
‘Then I shall go too,’ said he.
‘And I am sure you will enjoy
it!’ she exclaimed in more buoyant tones.
‘Everybody does who tries it.’
‘God forbid that I should!’ he said.
‘But I must look after you.’
They opened the wicket and went up
the road abreast of each other, but at some distance
apart, scarcely a word passing between them.
The evening was rather less favourable to smuggling
enterprise than the last had been, the wind being
lower, and the sky somewhat clear towards the north.
‘It is rather lighter,’ said Stockdale.
‘’Tis, unfortunately,’
said she. ’But it is only from those few
stars over there. The moon was new to-day at
four o’clock, and I expected clouds. I
hope we shall be able to do it this dark, for when
we have to sink ’em for long it makes the stuff
taste bleachy, and folks don’t like it so well.’
Her course was different from that
of the preceding night, branching off to the left
over Lord’s Barrow as soon as they had got out
of the lane and crossed the highway. By the
time they reached Chaldon Down, Stockdale, who had
been in perplexed thought as to what he should say
to her, decided that he would not attempt expostulation
now, while she was excited by the adventure, but wait
till it was over, and endeavour to keep her from such
practices in future. It occurred to him once
or twice, as they rambled on, that should they be
surprised by the excisemen, his situation would be
more awkward than hers, for it would be difficult
to prove his true motive in coming to the spot; but
the risk was a slight consideration beside his wish
to be with her.
They now arrived at a ravine which
lay on the outskirts of Chaldon, a village two miles
on their way towards the point of the shore they sought.
Lizzy broke the silence this time: ’I have
to wait here to meet the carriers. I don’t
know if they have come yet. As I told you, we
go to Lulstead Cove to-night, and it is two miles
further than Ringsworth.’
It turned out that the men had already
come; for while she spoke two or three dozen heads
broke the line of the slope, and a company of them
at once descended from the bushes where they had been
lying in wait. These carriers were men whom
Lizzy and other proprietors regularly employed to
bring the tubs from the boat to a hiding-place inland.
They were all young fellows of Nether-Moynton, Chaldon,
and the neighbourhood, quiet and inoffensive persons,
who simply engaged to carry the cargo for Lizzy and
her cousin Owlett, as they would have engaged in any
other labour for which they were fairly well paid.
At a word from her they closed in
together. ’You had better take it now,’
she said to them; and handed to each a packet.
It contained six shillings, their remuneration for
the night’s undertaking, which was paid beforehand
without reference to success or failure; but, besides
this, they had the privilege of selling as agents
when the run was successfully made. As soon
as it was done, she said to them, ’The place
is the old one near Lulstead Cove;’ the men
till that moment not having been told whither they
were bound, for obvious reasons. ’Owlett
will meet you there,’ added Lizzy. ’I
shall follow behind, to see that we are not watched.’
The carriers went on, and Stockdale
and Mrs. Newberry followed at a distance of a stone’s
throw. ‘What do these men do by day?’
he said.
’Twelve or fourteen of them
are labouring men. Some are brickmakers, some
carpenters, some shoe-makers, some thatchers.
They are all known to me very well. Nine of
’em are of your own congregation.’
‘I can’t help that,’ said Stockdale.
’O, I know you can’t.
I only told you. The others are more church-inclined,
because they supply the pa’son with all the spirits
he requires, and they don’t wish to show unfriendliness
to a customer.’
’How do you choose ’em?’ said Stockdale.
’We choose ’em for their
closeness, and because they are strong and surefooted,
and able to carry a heavy load a long way without being
tired.’
Stockdale sighed as she enumerated
each particular, for it proved how far involved in
the business a woman must be who was so well acquainted
with its conditions and needs. And yet he felt
more tenderly towards her at this moment than he had
felt all the foregoing day. Perhaps it was that
her experienced manner and hold indifference stirred
his admiration in spite of himself.
‘Take my arm, Lizzy,’ he murmured.
‘I don’t want it,’
she said. ’Besides, we may never be to
each other again what we once have been.’
‘That depends upon you,’
said he, and they went on again as before.
The hired carriers paced along over
Chaldon Down with as little hesitation as if it had
been day, avoiding the cart-way, and leaving the village
of East Chaldon on the left, so as to reach the crest
of the hill at a lonely trackless place not far from
the ancient earthwork called Round Pound. An
hour’s brisk walking brought them within sound
of the sea, not many hundred yards from Lulstead Cove.
Here they paused, and Lizzy and Stockdale came up
with them, when they went on together to the verge
of the cliff. One of the men now produced an
iron bar, which he drove firmly into the soil a yard
from the edge, and attached to it a rope that he had
uncoiled from his body. They all began to descend,
partly stepping, partly sliding down the incline, as
the rope slipped through their hands.
‘You will not go to the bottom,
Lizzy?’ said Stockdale anxiously.
‘No. I stay here to watch,’
she said. ‘Owlett is down there.’
The men remained quite silent when
they reached the shore; and the next thing audible
to the two at the top was the dip of heavy oars, and
the dashing of waves against a boat’s bow.
In a moment the keel gently touched the shingle,
and Stockdale heard the footsteps of the thirty-six
carriers running forwards over the pebbles towards
the point of landing.
There was a sousing in the water as
of a brood of ducks plunging in, showing that the
men had not been particular about keeping their legs,
or even their waists, dry from the brine: but
it was impossible to see what they were doing, and
in a few minutes the shingle was trampled again.
The iron bar sustaining the rope, on which Stockdale’s
hand rested, began to swerve a little, and the carriers
one by one appeared climbing up the sloping cliff;
dripping audibly as they came, and sustaining themselves
by the guide-rope. Each man on reaching the top
was seen to be carrying a pair of tubs, one on his
back and one on his chest, the two being slung together
by cords passing round the chine hoops, and resting
on the carrier’s shoulders. Some of the
stronger men carried three by putting an extra one
on the top behind, but the customary load was a pair,
these being quite weighty enough to give their bearer
the sensation of having chest and backbone in contact
after a walk of four or five miles.
‘Where is Owlett?’ said Lizzy to one of
them.
‘He will not come up this way,’
said the carrier. ’He’s to bide on
shore till we be safe off.’ Then, without
waiting for the rest, the foremost men plunged across
the down; and, when the last had ascended, Lizzy pulled
up the rope, wound it round her arm, wriggled the bar
from the sod, and turned to follow the carriers.
‘You are very anxious about
Owlett’s safety,’ said the minister.
‘Was there ever such a man!’
said Lizzy. ‘Why, isn’t he my cousin?’
‘Yes. Well, it is a bad
night’s work,’ said Stockdale heavily.
’But I’ll carry the bar and rope for
you.’
‘Thank God, the tubs have got so far all right,’
said she.
Stockdale shook his head, and, taking
the bar, walked by her side towards the downs; and
the moan of the sea was heard no more.
’Is this what you meant the
other day when you spoke of having business with Owlett?’
the young man asked.
‘This is it,’ she replied.
‘I never see him on any other matter.’
‘A partnership of that kind with a young man
is very odd.’
‘It was begun by my father and his, who were
brother-laws.’
Her companion could not blind himself
to the fact that where tastes and pursuits were so
akin as Lizzy’s and Owlett’s, and where
risks were shared, as with them, in every undertaking,
there would be a peculiar appropriateness in her answering
Owlett’s standing question on matrimony in the
affirmative. This did not soothe Stockdale, its
tendency being rather to stimulate in him an effort
to make the pair as inappropriate as possible, and
win her away from this nocturnal crew to correctness
of conduct and a minister’s parlour in some
far-removed inland county.
They had been walking near enough
to the file of carriers for Stockdale to perceive
that, when they got into the road to the village, they
split up into two companies of unequal size, each
of which made off in a direction of its own.
One company, the smaller of the two, went towards
the church, and by the time that Lizzy and Stockdale
reached their own house these men had scaled the churchyard
wall, and were proceeding noiselessly over the grass
within.
’I see that Owlett has arranged
for one batch to be put in the church again,’
observed Lizzy. ’Do you remember my taking
you there the first night you came?’
‘Yes, of course,’ said
Stockdale. ’No wonder you had permission
to broach the tubs they were his, I suppose?’
’No, they were not they
were mine; I had permission from myself. The
day after that they went several miles inland in a
waggon-load of manure, and sold very well.’
At this moment the group of men who
had made off to the left some time before began leaping
one by one from the hedge opposite Lizzy’s house,
and the first man, who had no tubs upon his shoulders,
came forward.
‘Mrs. Newberry, isn’t it?’ he said
hastily.
‘Yes, Jim,’ said she. ‘What’s
the matter?’
‘I find that we can’t
put any in Badger’s Clump to-night, Lizzy,’
said Owlett. ’The place is watched.
We must sling the apple-tree in the orchet if there’s
time. We can’t put any more under the church
lumber than I have sent on there, and my mixen
hev already more in en than is safe.’
‘Very well,’ she said. ‘Be
quick about it that’s all. What
can I do?’
’Nothing at all, please.
Ah, it is the minister! you two that can’t
do anything had better get indoors and not be zeed.’
While Owlett thus conversed, in a
tone so full of contraband anxiety and so free from
lover’s jealousy, the men who followed him had
been descending one by one from the hedge; and it
unfortunately happened that when the hindmost took
his leap, the cord slipped which sustained his tubs:
the result was that both the kegs fell into the road,
one of them being stove in by the blow.
‘’Öd drown it all!’ said Owlett,
rushing back.
‘It is worth a good deal, I suppose?’
said Stockdale.
‘O no about two guineas
and half to us now,’ said Lizzy excitedly.
’It isn’t that it is the smell!
It is so blazing strong before it has been lowered
by water, that it smells dreadfully when spilt in the
road like that! I do hope Latimer won’t
pass by till it is gone off.’
Owlett and one or two others picked
up the burst tub and began to scrape and trample over
the spot, to disperse the liquor as much as possible;
and then they all entered the gate of Owlett’s
orchard, which adjoined Lizzy’s garden on the
right. Stockdale did not care to follow them,
for several on recognizing him had looked wonderingly
at his presence, though they said nothing. Lizzy
left his side and went to the bottom of the garden,
looking over the hedge into the orchard, where the
men could be dimly seen bustling about, and apparently
hiding the tubs. All was done noiselessly, and
without a light; and when it was over they dispersed
in different directions, those who had taken their
cargoes to the church having already gone off to their
homes.
Lizzy returned to the garden-gate,
over which Stockdale was still abstractedly leaning.
‘It is all finished: I am going indoors
now,’ she said gently. ‘I will leave
the door ajar for you.’
‘O no you needn’t,’ said
Stockdale; ‘I am coming too.’
But before either of them had moved,
the faint clatter of horses’ hoofs broke upon
the ear, and it seemed to come from the point where
the track across the down joined the hard road.
‘They are just too late!’ cried Lizzy
exultingly.
‘Who?’ said Stockdale.
’Latimer, the riding-officer,
and some assistant of his. We had better go
indoors.’
They entered the house, and Lizzy
bolted the door. ’Please don’t get
a light, Mr. Stockdale,’ she said.
‘Of course I will not,’ said he.
‘I thought you might be on the
side of the king,’ said Lizzy, with faintest
sarcasm.
‘I am,’ said Stockdale.
’But, Lizzy Newberry, I love you, and you know
it perfectly well; and you ought to know, if you do
not, what I have suffered in my conscience on your
account these last few days!’
‘I guess very well,’ she
said hurriedly. ’Yet I don’t see
why. Ah, you are better than I!’
The trotting of the horses seemed
to have again died away, and the pair of listeners
touched each other’s fingers in the cold ‘Good-night’
of those whom something seriously divided. They
were on the landing, but before they had taken three
steps apart, the tramp of the horsemen suddenly revived,
almost close to the house. Lizzy turned to the
staircase window, opened the casement about an inch,
and put her face close to the aperture. ’Yes,
one of ’em is Latimer,’ she whispered.
’He always rides a white horse. One would
think it was the last colour for a man in that line.’
Stockdale looked, and saw the white
shape of the animal as it passed by; but before the
riders had gone another ten yards, Latimer reined in
his horse, and said something to his companion which
neither Stockdale nor Lizzy could hear. Its
drift was, however, soon made evident, for the other
man stopped also; and sharply turning the horses’
heads they cautiously retraced their steps.
When they were again opposite Mrs. Newberry’s
garden, Latimer dismounted, and the man on the dark
horse did the same.
Lizzy and Stockdale, intently listening
and observing the proceedings, naturally put their
heads as close as possible to the slit formed by the
slightly opened casement; and thus it occurred that
at last their cheeks came positively into contact.
They went on listening, as if they did not know of
the singular incident which had happened to their faces,
and the pressure of each to each rather increased
than lessened with the lapse of time.
They could hear the excisemen sniffing
the air like hounds as they paced slowly along.
When they reached the spot where the tub had burst,
both stopped on the instant.
’Ay, ay, ‘tis quite strong
here,’ said the second officer. ’Shall
we knock at the door?’
‘Well, no,’ said Latimer.
’Maybe this is only a trick to put us off the
scent. They wouldn’t kick up this stink
anywhere near their hiding-place. I have known
such things before.’
’Anyhow, the things, or some
of ’em, must have been brought this way,’
said the other.
‘Yes,’ said Latimer musingly.
’Unless ’tis all done to tole us the wrong
way. I have a mind that we go home for to-night
without saying a word, and come the first thing in
the morning with more hands. I know they have
storages about here, but we can do nothing by this
owl’s light. We will look round the parish
and see if everybody is in bed, John; and if all is
quiet, we will do as I say.’
They went on, and the two inside the
window could hear them passing leisurely through the
whole village, the street of which curved round at
the bottom and entered the turnpike road at another
junction. This way the excisemen followed, and
the amble of their horses died quite away.
‘What will you do?’ said
Stockdale, withdrawing from his position.
She knew that he alluded to the coming
search by the officers, to divert her attention from
their own tender incident by the casement, which he
wished to be passed over as a thing rather dreamt of
than done. ’O, nothing,’ she replied,
with as much coolness as she could command under her
disappointment at his manner. ’We often
have such storms as this. You would not be frightened
if you knew what fools they are. Fancy riding
o’ horseback through the place: of course
they will hear and see nobody while they make that
noise; but they are always afraid to get off, in case
some of our fellows should burst out upon ’em,
and tie them up to the gate-post, as they have done
before now. Good-night, Mr. Stockdale.’
She closed the window and went to
her room, where a tear fell from her eyes; and that
not because of the alertness of the riding-officers.
CHAPTER VI - THE GREAT SEARCH AT NETHER-MOYNTON
Stockdale was so excited by the events
of the evening, and the dilemma that he was placed
in between conscience and love, that he did not sleep,
or even doze, but remained as broadly awake as at noonday.
As soon as the grey light began to touch ever so
faintly the whiter objects in his bedroom he arose,
dressed himself, and went downstairs into the road.
The village was already astir.
Several of the carriers had heard the well-known
tramp of Latimer’s horse while they were undressing
in the dark that night, and had already communicated
with each other and Owlett on the subject. The
only doubt seemed to be about the safety of those
tubs which had been left under the church gallery-stairs,
and after a short discussion at the corner of the
mill, it was agreed that these should be removed before
it got lighter, and hidden in the middle of a double
hedge bordering the adjoining field. However,
before anything could be carried into effect, the
footsteps of many men were heard coming down the lane
from the highway.
‘Damn it, here they be,’
said Owlett, who, having already drawn the hatch and
started his mill for the day, stood stolidly at the
mill-door covered with flour, as if the interest of
his whole soul was bound up in the shaking walls around
him.
The two or three with whom he had
been talking dispersed to their usual work, and when
the excise officers, and the formidable body of men
they had hired, reached the village cross, between
the mill and Mrs. Newberry’s house, the village
wore the natural aspect of a place beginning its morning
labours.
‘Now,’ said Latimer to
his associates, who numbered thirteen men in all,
’what I know is that the things are somewhere
in this here place. We have got the day before
us, and ’tis hard if we can’t light upon
’em and get ’em to Budmouth Custom-house
before night. First we will try the fuel-houses,
and then we’ll work our way into the chimmers,
and then to the ricks and stables, and so creep round.
You have nothing but your noses to guide ye, mind,
so use ’em to-day if you never did in your lives
before.’
Then the search began. Owlett,
during the early part, watched from his mill-window,
Lizzy from the door of her house, with the greatest
self-possession. A farmer down below, who also
had a share in the run, rode about with one eye on
his fields and the other on Latimer and his myrmidons,
prepared to put them off the scent if he should be
asked a question. Stockdale, who was no smuggler
at all, felt more anxiety than the worst of them,
and went about his studies with a heavy heart, coming
frequently to the door to ask Lizzy some question or
other on the consequences to her of the tubs being
found.
‘The consequences,’ she
said quietly, ’are simply that I shall lose ’em.
As I have none in the house or garden, they can’t
touch me personally.’
‘But you have some in the orchard?’
’Owlett rents that of me, and
he lends it to others. So it will be hard to
say who put any tubs there if they should be found.’
There was never such a tremendous
sniffing known as that which took place in Nether-Moynton
parish and its vicinity this day. All was done
methodically, and mostly on hands and knees.
At different hours of the day they had different plans.
From daybreak to breakfast-time the officers used
their sense of smell in a direct and straightforward
manner only, pausing nowhere but at such places as
the tubs might be supposed to be secreted in at that
very moment, pending their removal on the following
night. Among the places tested and examined were
Hollow trees Cupboards Culverts
Potato-graves Clock-cases Hedgerows
Fuel-houses Chimney-flues Faggot-ricks
Bedrooms Rainwater-butts Haystacks
Apple-lofts Pigsties Coppers and
ovens.
After breakfast they recommenced with renewed vigour, taking
a new line; that is to say, directing their attention to clothes that might be
supposed to have come in contact with the tubs in their removal from the shore,
such garments being usually tainted with the spirit, owing to its oozing between
the staves. They now sniffed at
Smock-frocks Smiths’ and shoemakers’
aprons
Old shirts and waistcoats Knee-naps and hedging-gloves
Coats and hats Tarpaulins
Breeches and leggings Market-cloaks
Women’s shawls and gowns Scarecrows
And as soon as the mid-day meal was
over, they pushed their search into places where the
spirits might have been thrown away in alarm:-
Horse-ponds Mixens Sinks in yards
Stable-drains Wet ditches Road-scrapings, and
Cinder-heaps Cesspools Back-door gutters.
But still these indefatigable excisemen
discovered nothing more than the original tell-tale
smell in the road opposite Lizzy’s house, which
even yet had not passed off.
‘I’ll tell ye what it
is, men,’ said Latimer, about three o’clock
in the afternoon, ‘we must begin over again.
Find them tubs I will.’
The men, who had been hired for the
day, looked at their hands and knees, muddy with creeping
on all fours so frequently, and rubbed their noses,
as if they had almost had enough of it; for the quantity
of bad air which had passed into each one’s
nostril had rendered it nearly as insensible as a
flue. However, after a moment’s hesitation,
they prepared to start anew, except three, whose power
of smell had quite succumbed under the excessive wear
and tear of the day.
By this time not a male villager was
to be seen in the parish. Owlett was not at
his mill, the farmers were not in their fields, the
parson was not in his garden, the smith had left his
forge, and the wheelwright’s shop was silent.
‘Where the divil are the folk
gone?’ said Latimer, waking up to the fact of
their absence, and looking round. ’I’ll
have ’em up for this! Why don’t
they come and help us? There’s not a man
about the place but the Methodist parson, and he’s
an old woman. I demand assistance in the king’s
name!’
‘We must find the jineral public
afore we can demand that,’ said his lieutenant.
’Well, well, we shall do better
without ’em,’ said Latimer, who changed
his moods at a moment’s notice. ’But
there’s great cause of suspicion in this silence
and this keeping out of sight, and I’ll bear
it in mind. Now we will go across to Owlett’s
orchard, and see what we can find there.’
Stockdale, who heard this discussion
from the garden-gate, over which he had been leaning,
was rather alarmed, and thought it a mistake of the
villagers to keep so completely out of the way.
He himself, like the excisemen, had been wondering
for the last half-hour what could have become of them.
Some labourers were of necessity engaged in distant
fields, but the master-workmen should have been at
home; though one and all, after just showing themselves
at their shops, had apparently gone off for the day.
He went in to Lizzy, who sat at a back window sewing,
and said, ‘Lizzy, where are the men?’
Lizzy laughed. ‘Where
they mostly are when they’re run so hard as this.’
She cast her eyes to heaven. ‘Up there,’
she said.
Stockdale looked up. ‘What on
the top of the church tower?’ he asked, seeing
the direction of her glance.
‘Yes.’
‘Well, I expect they will soon
have to come down,’ said he gravely. ’I
have been listening to the officers, and they are going
to search the orchard over again, and then every nook
in the church.’
Lizzy looked alarmed for the first
time. ’Will you go and tell our folk?’
she said. ‘They ought to be let know.’
Seeing his conscience struggling within him like
a boiling pot, she added, ’No, never mind, I’ll
go myself.’
She went out, descended the garden,
and climbed over the churchyard wall at the same time
that the preventive-men were ascending the road to
the orchard. Stockdale could do no less than
follow her. By the time that she reached the
tower entrance he was at her side, and they entered
together.
Nether-Moynton church-tower was, as
in many villages, without a turret, and the only way
to the top was by going up to the singers’ gallery,
and thence ascending by a ladder to a square trap-door
in the floor of the bell-loft, above which a permanent
ladder was fixed, passing through the bells to a hole
in the roof. When Lizzy and Stockdale reached
the gallery and looked up, nothing but the trap-door
and the five holes for the bell-ropes appeared.
The ladder was gone.
‘There’s no getting up,’ said Stockdale.
‘O yes, there is,’ said
she. ’There’s an eye looking at us
at this moment through a knot-hole in that trap-door.’
And as she spoke the trap opened,
and the dark line of the ladder was seen descending
against the white-washed wall. When it touched
the bottom Lizzy dragged it to its place, and said,
’If you’ll go up, I’ll follow.’
The young man ascended, and presently
found himself among consecrated bells for the first
time in his life, nonconformity having been in the
Stockdale blood for some generations. He eyed
them uneasily, and looked round for Lizzy. Owlett
stood here, holding the top of the ladder.
‘What, be you really one of us?’ said
the miller.
‘It seems so,’ said Stockdale sadly.
‘He’s not,’ said
Lizzy, who overheard. ’He’s neither
for nor against us. He’ll do us no harm.’
She stepped up beside them, and then
they went on to the next stage, which, when they had
clambered over the dusty bell-carriages, was of easy
ascent, leading towards the hole through which the
pale sky appeared, and into the open air. Owlett
remained behind for a moment, to pull up the lower
ladder.
‘Keep down your heads,’
said a voice, as soon as they set foot on the flat.
Stockdale here beheld all the missing
parishioners, lying on their stomachs on the tower
roof, except a few who, elevated on their hands and
knees, were peeping through the embrasures of
the parapet. Stockdale did the same, and saw
the village lying like a map below him, over which
moved the figures of the excisemen, each foreshortened
to a crablike object, the crown of his hat forming
a circular disc in the centre of him. Some of
the men had turned their heads when the young preacher’s
figure arose among them.
‘What, Mr. Stockdale?’
said Matt Grey, in a tone of surprise.
‘I’d as lief that it hadn’t
been,’ said Jim Clarke. ’If the pa’son
should see him a trespassing here in his tower, ’twould
be none the better for we, seeing how ’a do
hate chapel-members. He’d never buy a
tub of us again, and he’s as good a customer
as we have got this side o’ Warm’ll.’
‘Where is the pa’son?’ said Lizzy.
’In his house, to be sure, that
he mid see nothing of what’s going on where
all good folks ought to be, and this young man likewise.’
‘Well, he has brought some news,’
said Lizzy. ’They are going to search
the orchet and church; can we do anything if they should
find?’
‘Yes,’ said her cousin
Owlett. ‘That’s what we’ve
been talking o’, and we have settled our line.
Well, be dazed!’
The exclamation was caused by his
perceiving that some of the searchers, having got
into the orchard, and begun stooping and creeping hither
and thither, were pausing in the middle, where a tree
smaller than the rest was growing. They drew
closer, and bent lower than ever upon the ground.
‘O, my tubs!’ said Lizzy
faintly, as she peered through the parapet at them.
’They have got ’em, ‘a b’lieve,’
said Owlett.
The interest in the movements of the
officers was so keen that not a single eye was looking
in any other direction; but at that moment a shout
from the church beneath them attracted the attention
of the smugglers, as it did also of the party in the
orchard, who sprang to their feet and went towards
the churchyard wall. At the same time those of
the Government men who had entered the church unperceived
by the smugglers cried aloud, ’Here be some
of ’em at last.’
The smugglers remained in a blank
silence, uncertain whether ’some of ‘em’
meant tubs or men; but again peeping cautiously over
the edge of the tower they learnt that tubs were the
things descried; and soon these fated articles were
brought one by one into the middle of the churchyard
from their hiding-place under the gallery-stairs.
’They are going to put ’em
on Hinton’s vault till they find the rest!’
said Lizzy hopelessly. The excisemen had, in
fact, begun to pile up the tubs on a large stone slab
which was fixed there; and when all were brought out
from the tower, two or three of the men were left standing
by them, the rest of the party again proceeding to
the orchard.
The interest of the smugglers in the
next manoeuvres of their enemies became painfully
intense. Only about thirty tubs had been secreted
in the lumber of the tower, but seventy were hidden
in the orchard, making up all that they had brought
ashore as yet, the remainder of the cargo having been
tied to a sinker and dropped overboard for another
night’s operations. The excisemen, having
re-entered the orchard, acted as if they were positive
that here lay hidden the rest of the tubs, which they
were determined to find before nightfall. They
spread themselves out round the field, and advancing
on all fours as before, went anew round every apple-tree
in the enclosure. The young tree in the middle
again led them to pause, and at length the whole company
gathered there in a way which signified that a second
chain of reasoning had led to the same results as
the first.
When they had examined the sod hereabouts
for some minutes, one of the men rose, ran to a disused
porch of the church where tools were kept, and returned
with the sexton’s pickaxe and shovel, with which
they set to work.
‘Are they really buried there?’
said the minister, for the grass was so green and
uninjured that it was difficult to believe it had been
disturbed. The smugglers were too interested
to reply, and presently they saw, to their chagrin,
the officers stand several on each side of the tree;
and, stooping and applying their hands to the soil,
they bodily lifted the tree and the turf around it.
The apple-tree now showed itself to be growing in
a shallow box, with handles for lifting at each of
the four sides. Under the site of the tree a
square hole was revealed, and an exciseman went and
looked down.
‘It is all up now,’ said
Owlett quietly. ’And now all of ye get
down before they notice we are here; and be ready
for our next move. I had better bide here till
dark, or they may take me on suspicion, as ’tis
on my ground. I’ll be with ye as soon
as daylight begins to pink in.’
‘And I?’ said Lizzy.
’You please look to the linch-pins
and screws; then go indoors and know nothing at all.
The chaps will do the rest.’
The ladder was replaced, and all but
Owlett descended, the men passing off one by one at
the back of the church, and vanishing on their respective
errands.
Lizzy walked boldly along the street,
followed closely by the minister.
‘You are going indoors, Mrs. Newberry?’
he said.
She knew from the words ‘Mrs.
Newberry’ that the division between them had
widened yet another degree.
‘I am not going home,’
she said. ’I have a little thing to do
before I go in. Martha Sarah will get your tea.’
‘O, I don’t mean on that
account,’ said Stockdale. ’What can
you have to do further in this unhallowed affair?’
‘Only a little,’ she said.
‘What is that? I’ll go with you.’
’No, I shall go by myself.
Will you please go indoors? I shall be there
in less than an hour.’
‘You are not going to run any
danger, Lizzy?’ said the young man, his tenderness
reasserting itself.
‘None whatever worth
mentioning,’ answered she, and went down towards
the Cross.
Stockdale entered the garden gate,
and stood behind it looking on. The excisemen
were still busy in the orchard, and at last he was
tempted to enter, and watch their proceedings.
When he came closer he found that the secret cellar,
of whose existence he had been totally unaware, was
formed by timbers placed across from side to side about
a foot under the ground, and grassed over.
The excisemen looked up at Stockdale’s
fair and downy countenance, and evidently thinking
him above suspicion, went on with their work again.
As soon as all the tubs were taken out, they began
tearing up the turf; pulling out the timbers, and
breaking in the sides, till the cellar was wholly
dismantled and shapeless, the apple-tree lying with
its roots high to the air. But the hole which
had in its time held so much contraband merchandize
was never completely filled up, either then or afterwards,
a depression in the greensward marking the spot to
this day.
CHAPTER VII - THE WALK TO WARM’ELL CROSS AND AFTERWARDS
As the goods had all to be carried
to Budmouth that night, the excisemen’s next
object was to find horses and carts for the journey,
and they went about the village for that purpose.
Latimer strode hither and thither with a lump of
chalk in his hand, marking broad-arrows so vigorously
on every vehicle and set of harness that he came across,
that it seemed as if he would chalk broad-arrows on
the very hedges and roads. The owner of every
conveyance so marked was bound to give it up for Government
purposes. Stockdale, who had had enough of the
scene, turned indoors thoughtful and depressed.
Lizzy was already there, having come in at the back,
though she had not yet taken off her bonnet.
She looked tired, and her mood was not much brighter
than his own. They had but little to say to
each other; and the minister went away and attempted
to read; but at this he could not succeed, and he
shook the little bell for tea.
Lizzy herself brought in the tray,
the girl having run off into the village during the
afternoon, too full of excitement at the proceedings
to remember her state of life. However, almost
before the sad lovers had said anything to each other,
Martha came in in a steaming state.
’O, there’s such a stoor,
Mrs. Newberry and Mr. Stockdale! The king’s
excisemen can’t get the carts ready nohow at
all! They pulled Thomas Ballam’s, and
William Rogers’s, and Stephen Sprake’s
carts into the road, and off came the wheels, and
down fell the carts; and they found there was no linch-pins
in the arms; and then they tried Samuel Shane’s
waggon, and found that the screws were gone from he,
and at last they looked at the dairyman’s cart,
and he’s got none neither! They have gone
now to the blacksmith’s to get some made, but
he’s nowhere to be found!’
Stockdale looked at Lizzy, who blushed
very slightly, and went out of the room, followed
by Martha Sarah. But before they had got through
the passage there was a rap at the front door, and
Stockdale recognized Latimer’s voice addressing
Mrs. Newberry, who had turned back.
’For God’s sake, Mrs.
Newberry, have you seen Hardman the blacksmith up
this way? If we could get hold of him, we’d
e’en a’most drag him by the hair of his
head to his anvil, where he ought to be.’
‘He’s an idle man, Mr.
Latimer,’ said Lizzy archly. ’What
do you want him for?’
’Why, there isn’t a horse
in the place that has got more than three shoes on,
and some have only two. The waggon-wheels be
without strakes, and there’s no linch-pins to
the carts. What with that, and the bother about
every set of harness being out of order, we shan’t
be off before nightfall upon my soul we
shan’t. ’Tis a rough lot, Mrs. Newberry,
that you’ve got about you here; but they’ll
play at this game once too often, mark my words they
will! There’s not a man in the parish that
don’t deserve to be whipped.’
It happened that Hardman was at that
moment a little further up the lane, smoking his pipe
behind a holly-bush. When Latimer had done speaking
he went on in this direction, and Hardman, hearing
the exciseman’s steps, found curiosity too strong
for prudence. He peeped out from the bush at
the very moment that Latimer’s glance was on
it. There was nothing left for him to do but
to come forward with unconcern.
‘I’ve been looking for
you for the last hour!’ said Latimer with a glare
in his eye.
‘Sorry to hear that,’
said Hardman. ’I’ve been out for
a stroll, to look for more hid tubs, to deliver ’em
up to Gover’ment.’
‘O yes, Hardman, we know it,’
said Latimer, with withering sarcasm. ’We
know that you’ll deliver ’em up to Gover’ment.
We know that all the parish is helping us, and have
been all day! Now you please walk along with
me down to your shop, and kindly let me hire ye in
the king’s name.’
They went down the lane together;
and presently there resounded from the smithy the
ring of a hammer not very briskly swung. However,
the carts and horses were got into some sort of travelling
condition, but it was not until after the clock had
struck six, when the muddy roads were glistening under
the horizontal light of the fading day. The smuggled
tubs were soon packed into the vehicles, and Latimer,
with three of his assistants, drove slowly out of
the village in the direction of the port of Budmouth,
some considerable number of miles distant, the other
excisemen being left to watch for the remainder of
the cargo, which they knew to have been sunk somewhere
between Ringsworth and Lulstead Cove, and to unearth
Owlett, the only person clearly implicated by the
discovery of the cave.
Women and children stood at the doors
as the carts, each chalked with the Government pitchfork,
passed in the increasing twilight; and as they stood
they looked at the confiscated property with a melancholy
expression that told only too plainly the relation
which they bore to the trade.
‘Well, Lizzy,’ said Stockdale,
when the crackle of the wheels had nearly died away.
’This is a fit finish to your adventure.
I am truly thankful that you have got off without
suspicion, and the loss only of the liquor. Will
you sit down and let me talk to you?’
‘By and by,’ she said. ‘But
I must go out now.’
‘Not to that horrid shore again?’ he said
blankly.
‘No, not there. I am only going to see
the end of this day’s business.’
He did not answer to this, and she
moved towards the door slowly, as if waiting for him
to say something more.
‘You don’t offer to come
with me,’ she added at last. ’I suppose
that’s because you hate me after all this?’
’Can you say it, Lizzy, when
you know I only want to save you from such practices?
Come with you of course I will, if it is only to take
care of you. But why will you go out again?’
’Because I cannot rest indoors.
Something is happening, and I must know what.
Now, come!’ And they went into the dusk together.
When they reached the turnpike-road
she turned to the right, and he soon perceived that
they were following the direction of the excisemen
and their load. He had given her his arm, and
every now and then she suddenly pulled it back, to
signify that he was to halt a moment and listen.
They had walked rather quickly along the first quarter
of a mile, and on the second or third time of standing
still she said, ’I hear them ahead don’t
you?’
‘Yes,’ he said; ‘I hear the wheels.
But what of that?’
‘I only want to know if they get clear away
from the neighbourhood.’
‘Ah,’ said he, a light
breaking upon him. ’Something desperate
is to be attempted! and now I remember
there was not a man about the village when we left.’
‘Hark!’ she murmured.
The noise of the cartwheels had stopped, and given
place to another sort of sound.
‘’Tis a scuffle!’
said Stockdale. ’There’ll be murder!
Lizzy, let go my arm; I am going on. On my
conscience, I must not stay here and do nothing!’
‘There’ll be no murder,
and not even a broken head,’ she said.
’Our men are thirty to four of them: no
harm will be done at all.’
‘Then there is an attack!’
exclaimed Stockdale; ’and you knew it was to
be. Why should you side with men who break the
laws like this?’
’Why should you side with men
who take from country traders what they have honestly
bought wi’ their own money in France?’
said she firmly.
‘They are not honestly bought,’ said he.
‘They are,’ she contradicted.
’I and Owlett and the others paid thirty shillings
for every one of the tubs before they were put on board
at Cherbourg, and if a king who is nothing to us sends
his people to steal our property, we have a right
to steal it back again.’
Stockdale did not stop to argue the
matter, but went quickly in the direction of the noise,
Lizzy keeping at his side. ’Don’t
you interfere, will you, dear Richard?’ she
said anxiously, as they drew near. ’Don’t
let us go any closer: ’tis at Warm’ell
Cross where they are seizing ’em. You can
do no good, and you may meet with a hard blow!’
‘Let us see first what is going
on,’ he said. But before they had got
much further the noise of the cartwheels began again;
and Stockdale soon found that they were coming towards
him. In another minute the three carts came
up, and Stockdale and Lizzy stood in the ditch to let
them pass.
Instead of being conducted by four
men, as had happened when they went out of the village,
the horses and carts were now accompanied by a body
of from twenty to thirty, all of whom, as Stockdale
perceived to his astonishment, had blackened faces.
Among them walked six or eight huge female figures,
whom, from their wide strides, Stockdale guessed to
be men in disguise. As soon as the party discerned
Lizzy and her companion four or five fell back, and
when the carts had passed, came close to the pair.
‘There is no walking up this
way for the present,’ said one of the gaunt
women, who wore curls a foot long, dangling down the
sides of her face, in the fashion of the time.
Stockdale recognized this lady’s voice as Owlett’s.
‘Why not?’ said Stockdale. ‘This
is the public highway.’
‘Now look here, youngster,’
said Owlett. ’O, ’tis the Methodist
parson! what, and Mrs. Newberry! Well,
you’d better not go up that way, Lizzy.
They’ve all run off, and folks have got their
own again.’
The miller then hastened on and joined
his comrades. Stockdale and Lizzy also turned
back. ‘I wish all this hadn’t been
forced upon us,’ she said regretfully.
’But if those excisemen had got off with the
tubs, half the people in the parish would have been
in want for the next month or two.’
Stockdale was not paying much attention
to her words, and he said, ’I don’t think
I can go back like this. Those four poor excisemen
may be murdered for all I know.’
‘Murdered!’ said Lizzy
impatiently. ‘We don’t do murder
here.’
‘Well, I shall go as far as
Warm’ell Cross to see,’ said Stockdale
decisively; and, without wishing her safe home or anything
else, the minister turned back. Lizzy stood
looking at him till his form was absorbed in the shades;
and then, with sadness, she went in the direction
of Nether-Moynton.
The road was lonely, and after nightfall
at this time of the year there was often not a passer
for hours. Stockdale pursued his way without
hearing a sound beyond that of his own footsteps; and
in due time he passed beneath the trees of the plantation
which surrounded the Warm’ell Cross-road.
Before he had reached the point of intersection he
heard voices from the thicket.
‘Hoi-hoi-hoi! Help, help!’
The voices were not at all feeble
or despairing, but they were unmistakably anxious.
Stockdale had no weapon, and before plunging into
the pitchy darkness of the plantation he pulled a stake
from the hedge, to use in case of need. When
he got among the trees he shouted ’What’s
the matter where are you?’
‘Here,’ answered the voices;
and, pushing through the brambles in that direction,
he came near the objects of his search.
‘Why don’t you come forward?’ said
Stockdale.
‘We be tied to the trees!’
‘Who are you?’
‘Poor Will Latimer the exciseman!’
said one plaintively. ’Just come and cut
these cords, there’s a good man. We were
afraid nobody would pass by to-night.’
Stockdale soon loosened them, upon
which they stretched their limbs and stood at their
ease.
‘The rascals!’ said Latimer,
getting now into a rage, though he had seemed quite
meek when Stockdale first came up. ’’Tis
the same set of fellows. I know they were Moynton
chaps to a man.’
’But we can’t swear to
’em,’ said another. ’Not one
of ’em spoke.’
‘What are you going to do?’ said Stockdale.
’I’d fain go back to Moynton, and have
at ’em again!’ said Latimer.
‘So would we!’ said his comrades.
‘Fight till we die!’ said Latimer.
‘We will, we will!’ said his men.
‘But,’ said Latimer, more
frigidly, as they came out of the plantation, ’we
don’t know that these chaps with black faces
were Moynton men? And proof is a hard thing.’
‘So it is,’ said the rest.
‘And therefore we won’t
do nothing at all,’ said Latimer, with complete
dispassionateness. ’For my part, I’d
sooner be them than we. The clitches of my arms
are burning like fire from the cords those two strapping
women tied round ’em. My opinion is, now
I have had time to think o’t, that you may serve
your Gover’ment at too high a price. For
these two nights and days I have not had an hour’s
rest; and, please God, here’s for home-along.’
The other officers agreed heartily
to this course; and, thanking Stockdale for his timely
assistance, they parted from him at the Cross, taking
themselves the western road, and Stockdale going back
to Nether-Moynton.
During that walk the minister was
lost in reverie of the most painful kind. As
soon as he got into the house, and before entering
his own rooms, he advanced to the door of the little
back parlour in which Lizzy usually sat with her mother.
He found her there alone. Stockdale went forward,
and, like a man in a dream, looked down upon the table
that stood between him and the young woman, who had
her bonnet and cloak still on. As he did not
speak, she looked up from her chair at him, with misgiving
in her eye.
‘Where are they gone?’ he then said listlessly.
’Who? I don’t
know. I have seen nothing of them since.
I came straight in here.’
’If your men can manage to get
off with those tubs, it will be a great profit to
you, I suppose?’
’A share will be mine, a share
my cousin Owlett’s, a share to each of the two
farmers, and a share divided amongst the men who helped
us.’
‘And you still think,’
he went on slowly, ’that you will not give this
business up?’
Lizzy rose, and put her hand upon
his shoulder. ‘Don’t ask that,’
she whispered. ’You don’t know what
you are asking. I must tell you, though I meant
not to do it. What I make by that trade is all
I have to keep my mother and myself with.’
He was astonished. ‘I
did not dream of such a thing,’ he said.
’I would rather have swept the streets, had
I been you. What is money compared with a clear
conscience?’
’My conscience is clear.
I know my mother, but the king I have never seen.
His dues are nothing to me. But it is a great
deal to me that my mother and I should live.’
‘Marry me, and promise to give
it up. I will keep your mother.’
‘It is good of you,’ she
said, trembling a little. ’Let me think
of it by myself. I would rather not answer now.’
She reserved her answer till the next
day, and came into his room with a solemn face.
‘I cannot do what you wished!’ she said
passionately. ’It is too much to ask.
My whole life ha’ been passed in this way.’
Her words and manner showed that before entering
she had been struggling with herself in private, and
that the contention had been strong.
Stockdale turned pale, but he spoke
quietly. ’Then, Lizzy, we must part.
I cannot go against my principles in this matter, and
I cannot make my profession a mockery. You know
how I love you, and what I would do for you; but this
one thing I cannot do.’
‘But why should you belong to
that profession?’ she burst out. ’I
have got this large house; why can’t you marry
me, and live here with us, and not be a Methodist
preacher any more? I assure you, Richard, it
is no harm, and I wish you could only see it as I
do! We only carry it on in winter: in summer
it is never done at all. It stirs up one’s
dull life at this time o’ the year, and gives
excitement, which I have got so used to now that I
should hardly know how to do ’ithout it.
At nights, when the wind blows, instead of being
dull and stupid, and not noticing whether it do blow
or not, your mind is afield, even if you are not afield
yourself; and you are wondering how the chaps are getting
on; and you walk up and down the room, and look out
o’ window, and then you go out yourself, and
know your way about as well by night as by day, and
have hairbreadth escapes from old Latimer and his fellows,
who are too stupid ever to really frighten us, and
only make us a bit nimble.’
’He frightened you a little
last night, anyhow: and I would advise you to
drop it before it is worse.’
She shook her head. ’No,
I must go on as I have begun. I was born to
it. It is in my blood, and I can’t be cured.
O, Richard, you cannot think what a hard thing you
have asked, and how sharp you try me when you put
me between this and my love for ‘ee!’
Stockdale was leaning with his elbow
on the mantelpiece, his hands over his eyes.
‘We ought never to have met, Lizzy,’ he
said. ’It was an ill day for us!
I little thought there was anything so hopeless and
impossible in our engagement as this. Well, it
is too late now to regret consequences in this way.
I have had the happiness of seeing you and knowing
you at least.’
‘You dissent from Church, and
I dissent from State,’ she said. ’And
I don’t see why we are not well matched.’
He smiled sadly, while Lizzy remained
looking down, her eyes beginning to overflow.
That was an unhappy evening for both
of them, and the days that followed were unhappy days.
Both she and he went mechanically about their employments,
and his depression was marked in the village by more
than one of his denomination with whom he came in
contact. But Lizzy, who passed her days indoors,
was unsuspected of being the cause: for it was
generally understood that a quiet engagement to marry
existed between her and her cousin Owlett, and had
existed for some time.
Thus uncertainly the week passed on;
till one morning Stockdale said to her: ‘I
have had a letter, Lizzy. I must call you that
till I am gone.’
‘Gone?’ said she blankly.
‘Yes,’ he said.
’I am going from this place. I felt it
would be better for us both that I should not stay
after what has happened. In fact, I couldn’t
stay here, and look on you from day to day, without
becoming weak and faltering in my course. I
have just heard of an arrangement by which the other
minister can arrive here in about a week; and let me
go elsewhere.’
That he had all this time continued
so firmly fixed in his resolution came upon her as
a grievous surprise. ‘You never loved me!’
she said bitterly.
‘I might say the same,’
he returned; ’but I will not. Grant me
one favour. Come and hear my last sermon on
the day before I go.’
Lizzy, who was a church-goer on Sunday
mornings, frequently attended Stockdale’s chapel
in the evening with the rest of the double-minded;
and she promised.
It became known that Stockdale was
going to leave, and a good many people outside his
own sect were sorry to hear it. The intervening
days flew rapidly away, and on the evening of the
Sunday which preceded the morning of his departure
Lizzy sat in the chapel to hear him for the last time.
The little building was full to overflowing, and he
took up the subject which all had expected, that of
the contraband trade so extensively practised among
them. His hearers, in laying his words to their
own hearts, did not perceive that they were most particularly
directed against Lizzy, till the sermon waxed warm,
and Stockdale nearly broke down with emotion.
In truth his own earnestness, and her sad eyes looking
up at him, were too much for the young man’s
equanimity. He hardly knew how he ended.
He saw Lizzy, as through a mist, turn and go away
with the rest of the congregation; and shortly afterwards
followed her home.
She invited him to supper, and they
sat down alone, her mother having, as was usual with
her on Sunday nights, gone to bed early.
‘We will part friends, won’t
we?’ said Lizzy, with forced gaiety, and never
alluding to the sermon: a reticence which rather
disappointed him.
‘We will,’ he said, with
a forced smile on his part; and they sat down.
It was the first meal that they had
ever shared together in their lives, and probably
the last that they would so share. When it was
over, and the indifferent conversation could no longer
be continued, he arose and took her hand. ‘Lizzy,’
he said, ‘do you say we must part do
you?’
‘You do,’ she said solemnly. ‘I
can say no more.’
‘Nor I,’ said he. ‘If that
is your answer, good-bye!’
Stockdale bent over her and kissed
her, and she involuntarily returned his kiss.
‘I shall go early,’ he said hurriedly.
’I shall not see you again.’
And he did leave early. He fancied,
when stepping forth into the grey morning light, to
mount the van which was to carry him away, that he
saw a face between the parted curtains of Lizzy’s
window, but the light was faint, and the panes glistened
with wet; so he could not be sure. Stockdale
mounted the vehicle, and was gone; and on the following
Sunday the new minister preached in the chapel of
the Moynton Wesleyans.
One day, two years after the parting,
Stockdale, now settled in a midland town, came into
Nether-Moynton by carrier in the original way.
Jogging along in the van that afternoon he had put
questions to the driver, and the answers that he received
interested the minister deeply. The result of
them was that he went without the least hesitation
to the door of his former lodging. It was about
six o’clock in the evening, and the same time
of year as when he had left; now, too, the ground was
damp and glistening, the west was bright, and Lizzy’s
snowdrops were raising their heads in the border under
the wall.
Lizzy must have caught sight of him
from the window, for by the time that he reached the
door she was there holding it open: and then,
as if she had not sufficiently considered her act
of coming out, she drew herself back, saying with
some constraint, ‘Mr. Stockdale!’
‘You knew it was,’ said
Stockdale, taking her hand. ’I wrote to
say I should call.’
‘Yes, but you did not say when,’ she answered.
’I did not. I was not
quite sure when my business would lead me to these
parts.’
‘You only came because business brought you
near?’
’Well, that is the fact; but
I have often thought I should like to come on purpose
to see you . . . But what’s all this that
has happened? I told you how it would be, Lizzy,
and you would not listen to me.’
‘I would not,’ she said
sadly. ’But I had been brought up to that
life; and it was second nature to me. However,
it is all over now. The officers have blood-money
for taking a man dead or alive, and the trade is going
to nothing. We were hunted down like rats.’
‘Owlett is quite gone, I hear.’
’Yes. He is in America.
We had a dreadful struggle that last time, when they
tried to take him. It is a perfect miracle that
he lived through it; and it is a wonder that I was
not killed. I was shot in the hand. It
was not by aim; the shot was really meant for my cousin;
but I was behind, looking on as usual, and the bullet
came to me. It bled terribly, but I got home
without fainting; and it healed after a time.
You know how he suffered?’
‘No,’ said Stockdale.
‘I only heard that he just escaped with his
life.’
’He was shot in the back; but
a rib turned the ball. He was badly hurt.
We would not let him be took. The men carried
him all night across the meads to Kingsbere, and hid
him in a barn, dressing his wound as well as they
could, till he was so far recovered as to be able to
get about. He had gied up his mill for some
time; and at last he got to Bristol, and took a passage
to America, and he’s settled in Wisconsin.’
‘What do you think of smuggling
now?’ said the minister gravely.
‘I own that we were wrong,’
said she. ’But I have suffered for it.
I am very poor now, and my mother has been dead these
twelve months . . . But won’t you come
in, Mr. Stockdale?’
Stockdale went in; and it is to be
supposed that they came to an understanding; for a
fortnight later there was a sale of Lizzy’s
furniture, and after that a wedding at a chapel in
a neighbouring town.
He took her away from her old haunts
to the home that he had made for himself in his native
county, where she studied her duties as a minister’s
wife with praiseworthy assiduity. It is said
that in after years she wrote an excellent tract called
Render unto Cæsar; or, The Repentant Villagers, in
which her own experience was anonymously used as the
introductory story. Stockdale got it printed,
after making some corrections, and putting in a few
powerful sentences of his own; and many hundreds of
copies were distributed by the couple in the course
of their married life.
April 1879.