WE posted five-and-thirty miles, then
stopped for a couple of hours to rest, and wait for
a night coach running northward.
On getting into this vehicle we were
fortunate enough to find the fourth inside place not
occupied. Mrs. Baggs showed her sense of the freedom
from restraint thus obtained by tying a huge red comforter
round her head like a turban, and immediately falling
fast asleep. This gave Alicia and me full liberty
to talk as we pleased. Our conversation was for
the most part of that particular kind which is not
of the smallest importance to any third person in
the whole world. One portion of it, however,
was an exception to this general rule. It had
a very positive influence on my fortunes, and it is,
therefore, I hope, of sufficient importance to bear
being communicated to the reader.
We had changed horses for the fourth
time, had seated ourselves comfortably in our places,
and had heard Mrs. Baggs resume the kindred occupations
of sleeping and snoring, when Alicia whispered to me:
“I must have no secrets, now, from you must
I, Frank?”
“You must have anything you
like, do anything you like, and say anything you like.
You must never ask leave but only grant
it!”
“Shall you always tell me that, Frank?”
I did not answer in words, but the
conversation suffered a momentary interruption.
Of what nature, susceptible people will easily imagine.
As for the hard-hearted I don’t write for them.
“My secret need not alarm you,”
Alicia went on, in tones that began to sound rather
sadly; “it is only about a tiny pasteboard box
that I can carry in the bosom of my dress. But
it has got three diamonds in it, Frank, and one beautiful
ruby. Did you ever give me credit for having so
much that was valuable about me? shall I
give it you to keep for me?”
I remembered directly Old File’s
story of Mrs. Dulcifer’s elopement, and of the
jewels she had taken with her. It was easy to
guess, after what I had heard, that the poor woman
had secretly preserved some of her little property
for the benefit of her child.
“I have no present need of money,
darling,” I answered; “keep the box in
its present enviable position.” I stopped
there, saying nothing of the thought that was really
uppermost in my mind. If any unforeseen accident
placed me within the grip of the law, I should not
now have the double trial to endure of leaving my
wife for a prison, and leaving her helpless.
Morning dawned and found us still
awake. The sun rose, Mrs. Baggs left off snoring,
and we arrived at the last stage before the coach stopped.
I got out to see about some tea for
my traveling companions, and looked up at the outside
passengers. One of them seated in the dickey looked
down at me. He was a countryman in a smock-frock,
with a green patch over one of his eyes. Something
in the expression of his uncovered eye made me pause reflect turn
away uneasily and then look again at him
furtively. A sudden shudder ran through me from
top to toe; my heart sank; and my head began to feel
giddy. The countryman in the dickey was no other
than the Bow Street runner in disguise.
I kept away from the coach till the
fresh horses were on the point of starting, for I
was afraid to let Alicia see my face, after making
that fatal discovery. She noticed how pale I
was when I got in. I made the best excuse I could;
and gently insisted on her trying to sleep a little
after being awake all night. She lay back in her
corner; and Mrs. Baggs, comforted with a morning dram
in her tea, fell asleep again. I had thus an
hour’s leisure before me to think what I should
do next.
Screw was not in company with the
runner this time. He must have managed to identify
me somewhere, and the officer doubtless knew my personal
appearance well enough now to follow and make sure
of me without help. That I was the man whom he
was tracking could not be doubted: his disguise
and his position on the top of the coach proved it
only too plainly.
But why had he not seized me at once?
Probably because he had some ulterior purpose to serve,
which would have been thwarted by my immediate apprehension.
What that purpose was I did my best to fathom, and,
as I thought, succeeded in the attempt. What I
was to do when the coach stopped was a more difficult
point to settle. To give the runner the slip,
with two women to take care of, was simply impossible.
To treat him, as I had treated Screw at the red-brick
house, was equally out of the question, for he was
certain to give me no chance of catching him alone.
To keep him in ignorance of the real object of my journey,
and thereby to delay his discovering himself and attempting
to make me a prisoner, seemed the only plan on the
safety of which I could place the smallest reliance.
If I had ever had any idea of following the example
of other runaway lovers, and going to Gretna Green,
I should now have abandoned it. All roads in
that direction would betray what the purpose of my
journey was if I took them. Some large town in
Scotland would be the safest destination that I could
publicly advertise myself as bound for. Why not
boldly say that I was going with the two ladies to
Edinburgh?
Such was the plan of action which I now adopted.
To give any idea of the distracted
condition of my mind at the time when I was forming
it, is simply impossible. As for doubting whether
I ought to marry at all under these dangerous circumstances,
I must frankly own that I was too selfishly and violently
in love to look the question fairly in the face at
first. When I subsequently forced myself to consider
it, the most distinct project I could frame for overcoming
all difficulty was, to marry myself (the phrase is
strictly descriptive of the Scotch ceremony) at the
first inn we came to, over the Border; to hire a chaise,
or take places in a public conveyance to Edinburgh,
as a blind; to let Alicia and Mrs. Baggs occupy those
places; to remain behind myself; and to trust to my
audacity and cunning, when left alone, to give the
runner the slip. Writing of it now, in cool blood,
this seems as wild and hopeless a plan as ever was
imagined. But, in the confused and distracted
state of all my faculties at that period, it seemed
quite easy to execute, and not in the least doubtful
as to any one of its probable results.
On reaching the town at which the
coach stopped, we found ourselves obliged to hire
another chaise for a short distance, in order to get
to the starting-point of a second coach. Again
we took inside places, and again, at the first stages
when I got down to look at the outside passengers,
there was the countryman with the green shade over
his eye. Whatever conveyance we traveled by on
our northward road, we never escaped him. He
never attempted to speak to me, never seemed to notice
me, and never lost sight of me. On and on we went,
over roads that seemed interminable, and still the
dreadful sword of justice hung always, by its single
hair, over my head. My haggard face, my feverish
hands, my confused manner, my inexpressible impatience,
all belied the excuses with which I desperately continued
to ward off Alicia’s growing fears, and Mrs.
Baggs’s indignant suspicions. “Oh!
Frank, something has happened! For God’s
sake, tell me what!” “Mr. Softly,
I can see through a deal board as far as most people.
You are following the doctor’s wicked example,
and showing a want of confidence in me.”
These were the remonstrances of Alicia and the housekeeper.
At last we got out of England, and
I was still a free man. The chaise (we were posting
again) brought us into a dirty town, and drew up at
the door of a shabby inn. A shock-headed girl
received us.
“Are we in Scotland?” I asked.
“Mon! whar’ else should ye be?”
The accent relieved me of all doubt.
“A private room something
to eat, ready in an hour’s time chaise
afterward to the nearest place from which a coach runs
to Edinburgh.” Giving these orders rapidly,
I followed the girl with my traveling companions into
a stuffy little room. As soon as our attendant
had left us, I locked the door, put the key in my
pocket, and took Alicia by the hand.
“Now, Mrs. Baggs,” said I, “bear
witness ”
“You’re not going to marry
her now!” interposed Mrs. Baggs, indignantly.
“Bear witness, indeed! I won’t bear
witness till I’ve taken off my bonnet, and put
my hair tidy!”
“The ceremony won’t take
a minute,” I answered; “and I’ll
give you your five-pound note and open the door the
moment it’s over. Bear witness,”
I went on, drowning Mrs. Baggs’s expostulations
with the all-important marriage-words, “that
I take this woman, Alicia Dulcifer for my lawful wedded
wife.”
“In sickness and in health,
in poverty and wealth,” broke in Mrs. Baggs,
determining to represent the clergyman as well as to
be the witness.
“Alicia, dear,” I said,
interrupting in my turn, “repeat my words.
Say ‘I take this man, Francis Softly, for my
lawful wedded husband.’”
She repeated the sentence, with her
face very pale, with her dear hand cold and trembling
in mine.
“For better for worse,”
continued the indomitable Mrs. Baggs. “Little
enough of the Better, I’m afraid, and Lord knows
how much of the Worse.”
I stopped her again with the promised
five-pound note, and opened the room door. “Now,
ma’am,” I said, “go to your room;
take off your bonnet, and put your hair as tidy as
you please.”
Mrs. Baggs raised her eyes and hands
to heaven, exclaimed “Disgraceful!” and
flounced out of the room in a passion. Such was
my Scotch marriage as lawful a ceremony,
remember, as the finest family wedding at the largest
parish church in all England.
An hour passed; and I had not yet
summoned the cruel courage to communicate my real
situation to Alicia. The entry of the shock-headed
servant-girl to lay the cloth, followed by Mrs. Baggs,
who was never out of the way where eating and drinking
appeared in prospect, helped me to rouse myself.
I resolved to go out for a few minutes to reconnoiter,
and make myself acquainted with any facilities for
flight or hiding which the situation of the house
might present. No doubt the Bow Street runner
was lurking somewhere; but he must, as a matter of
course, have heard, or informed himself, of the orders
I had given relating to our conveyance on to Edinburgh;
and, in that case, I was still no more in danger of
his avowing himself and capturing me, than I had been
at any previous period of our journey.
“I am going out for a moment,
love, to see about the chaise,” I said to Alicia.
She suddenly looked up at me with an anxious searching
expression. Was my face betraying anything of
my real purpose? I hurried to the door before
she could ask me a single question.
The front of the inn stood nearly
in the middle of the principal street of the town.
No chance of giving any one the slip in that direction;
and no sign, either, of the Bow Street runner.
I sauntered round, with the most unconcerned manner
I could assume, to the back of the house, by the inn
yard. A door in one part of it stood half-open.
Inside was a bit of kitchen-garden, bounded by a paling;
beyond that some backs of detached houses; beyond
them, again, a plot of weedy ground, a few wretched
cottages, and the open, heathery moor. Good enough
for running away, but terribly bad for hiding.
I returned disconsolately to the inn.
Walking along the passage toward the staircase, I
suddenly heard footsteps behind me turned
round, and saw the Bow Street runner (clothed again
in his ordinary costume, and accompanied by two strange
men) standing between me and the door.
“Sorry to stop you from going
to Edinburgh, Mr. Softly,” he said. “But
you’re wanted back at Barkingham. I’ve
just found out what you have been traveling all the
way to Scotland for; and I take you prisoner, as one
of the coining gang. Take it easy, sir. I’ve
got help, you see; and you can’t throttle three
men, whatever you may have done at Barkingham with
one.”
He handcuffed me as he spoke.
Resistance was hopeless. I could only make an
appeal to his mercy, on Alicia’s account.
“Give me ten minutes,”
I said, “to break what has happened to my wife.
We were only married an hour ago. If she knows
this suddenly, it may be the death of her.”
“You’ve led me a nice
dance on a wrong scent,” answered the runner,
sulkily. “But I never was a hard man where
women are concerned. Go upstairs, and leave the
door open, so that I can see in through it if I like.
Hold your hat over your wrists, if you don’t
want her to see the handcuffs.”
I ascended the first flight of stairs,
and my heart gave a sudden bound as if it would burst.
I stopped, speechless and helpless, at the sight of
Alicia, standing alone on the landing. My first
look at her face told me she had heard all that had
passed in the passage. She passionately struck
the hat with which I had been trying to hide the handcuffs
out of my fingers, and clasped me in her arms with
such sudden and desperate energy that she absolutely
hurt me.
“I was afraid of something,
Frank,” she whispered. “I followed
you a little way. I stopped here; I have heard
everything. Don’t let us be parted!
I am stronger than you think me. I won’t
be frightened. I won’t cry. I won’t
trouble anybody, if that man will only take me with
you!”
It is best for my sake, if not for
the reader’s, to hurry over the scene that followed.
It ended with as little additional
wretchedness as could be expected. The runner
was resolute about keeping me handcuffed, and taking
me back, without a moment’s unnecessary waste
of time to Barkingham; but he relented on other points.
Where he was obliged to order a private
conveyance, there was no objection to Alicia and Mrs.
Baggs following it. Where we got into a coach,
there was no harm in their hiring two inside places.
I gave my watch, rings, and last guinea to Alicia,
enjoining her, on no account, to let her box of jewels
see the light until we could get proper advice on
the best means of turning them to account. She
listened to these and other directions with a calmness
that astonished me.
“You shan’t say, my dear,
that your wife has helped to make you uneasy by so
much as a word or a look,” she whispered to me
as we left the inn.
And she kept the hard promise implied
in that one short sentence throughout the journey.
Once only did I see her lose her self-possession.
At starting on our way south, Mrs. Baggs taking
the same incomprehensible personal offense at my misfortune
which she had previously taken at the doctor’s upbraided
me with my want of confidence in her, and declared
that it was the main cause of all my present trouble.
Alicia turned on her as she was uttering the words,
with a look and a warning that silenced her in an instant:
“If you say another syllable
that isn’t kind to him, you shall find your
way back by yourself!”
The words may not seem of much importance
to others; but I thought, as I overheard them, that
they justified every sacrifice I had made for my wife’s
sake.