The Broad Highway by Jeffery Farnol (ebook reader with highlight function TXT) đ
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âI am going to carry you into the cottage.â
âYou would not dare!â
âIf you refuse to walk, how else can you get there?â said I.
Anger, amazement, indignation, all these I saw in her eyes as she faced me, but anger most of all.
âOhâyou wouldânot dare!â she said again, and with a stamp of her foot.
âIndeed, yes,â I nodded. And now her glance wavered beneath mine, her head drooped, and, with a strange little sound that was neither a laugh nor a sob, and yet something of each, she turned upon her heel, ran into the cottage, and slammed the door behind her.
CHAPTER XIII
A PEDLER IN ARCADIA
The cottage, as I have said, was entirely hidden from the chance observer by reason of the foliage: ash, alder, and bramble flourished luxuriantly, growing very thick and high, with here and there a great tree; but, upon one side, there was a little grassy glade, or clearing rather, some ten yards square, and it was towards this that my eyes were directed as I reseated myself upon the settle beside the door, and waited the coming of the unknown.
Though the shadows were too deep for my eyes to serve me, yet I could follow the newcomerâs approach quite easily by the sound he made; indeed, I was particularly struck by the prodigious rustling of leaves. Whoever it was must be big and bulky, I thought, and clad, probably, in a long, trailing garment.
All at once I knew I was observed, for the sounds ceased, and I heard nothing save the distant bark of a dog and the ripple of the brook near by.
I remained there for, maybe, a full minute, very still, only my fists clenched themselves as I sat listening and waitingâand that minute was an hour.
âYou wonât be wantinâ ever a broom, now?â
The relief was so sudden and intense that I had much ado to keep from laughing outright.
âYou wonât be wantinâ ever a broom, now?â inquired the voice again.
âNo,â I answered, ânor yet a fine leather belt with a steel buckle made in Brummagem as ever was.â
âOh, itâs you, is it?â said the Pedler, and forthwith Gabbing Dick stepped out of the shadows, brooms on shoulder and bulging pack upon his back, at sight of which the leafy tumult of his approach was immediately accounted for. âSo itâs you, is it?â he repeated, setting down his brooms and spitting lugubriously at the nearest patch of shadow.
âYes,â I answered, âbut what brings you here?â
âI be goinâ to sleep âere, my chap.â
âOh!âyou donât mind the ghost, then?â
âOh, Lord, no! Theer be only two things as I canât abideâtrees as ainât trees is one on em, anâ womenâs tâ other.â
âWomen?â
âCome, didnât I âonce tell you I were married?â
âYou did.â
âVery well then! Trees as ainât trees is bad enough, Lord knows!âbut womenâs worseâah!â said the Pedler, shaking his head, âa sight worse! Ye see, trees ainât got tonguesâleastways not as I ever heerd tell on, anâ a tree never told a lieâor ate a apple, did it?â
âWhat do you mean by âate an appleâ?â
âI means as a tree canât tell a lie, or eat a apple, but a woman can tell a lieâwhich she doesâfrequent, anâ as for applesââ
âButââ I began.
âEve ate a apple, didnât she?â
âThe Scriptures say so,â I nodded.
âAnâ told a lie arterwards, didnât she?â
âSo we are given to understand.â
âVery well then!â said the Pedler, âthere yâ are!â and he turned to spit into the shadow again. âWotâs more,â he continued, ââtwere a woman as done me out oâ my birthright.â
âHow so?â
âWhy, âtwere Eve as got us druv out oâ the Gardin oâ Eden, werenât it? If it âadnât been for Eve I might haâ been livinâ on milk anâ âoney, ah! anâ playinâ wiâ butterflies, âstead oâ beinâ married, anâ peddlinâ these âere brooms. Donât talk to me oâ women, my chap; I canât abide âem bah! if theerâs any trouble afoot you may take your Bible oath as theerâs a woman about someâeresâtheer allus is!â
âDo you think so?â
âI knows so; ainât I a-âearinâ anâ a-seeinâ such all day, anâ every dayâtheerâs Black Jarge, for one.â
âWhat about him?â
âWhat about âim!â repeated the Pedler; âwây, ainât âis life been ruined, broke, wore away by one oâ them Eves?âvery well then!â
âWhat do you meanâhow has his life been ruined?â
âOh! the usual way of it; Jarge loves a gellâgell loves Jarge âsugar ainât sweeterâvery well then! Along comes another cove âa strange coveâa cove wiâ nice white âands anâ soft, takinâ waysââe talks wiâ âer walks wiâ âerâsmiles at âerâanâ pore Jarge ainât nowheeresâpore Jargeâs cake is doughâah! anâ doughy dough at that!â
âHow do you come to know all this?â
ââOw should I come to know it but from the man âisself? âDick,â says âeâ (baptismal name Richard, but Dick for short), ââDick,â says âe, âdâye see this âere stick?â anâ âe shows me a good, stout cudgel cut out oâ thâ âedge, anâ very neatly trimmed it were too. âAh! I sees it, Jarge,â says I. âAnâ dâye see this un?â says âe, âoldinâ up another as like the first as one pea to its fellow. âAh! I sees that un too, Jarge,â says I. âWell,â says Jarge, âoneâs for âim anâ oneâs for meââe can take âis chice,â âe says, âanâ when we do meet, itâs a-goinâ to be one or tâ other of us,â âe says, anâ wotâs moreââe looked it! âIf I âave to wait, anâ wait, anâ foller âim, anâ foller âim,â says Jarge, âIâll catch âim alone, one oâ these fine nights, anâ itâll be man to man.ââ
âAnd when did he tell you all this?â
ââS marninâ as ever was.â
âWhere did you see him?â
âOh, no!â said the Pedler, shaking his head, ânot by no manner oâ means. Iâm married, but I ainât that kind of a cove!â
âWhat do you mean?â
âThe runners is arter âimâlookinâ for âim âigh anâ low, anâ âthough married, I ainât one to give a man away. I ainât a friendly cove myself, never was, anâ never shall beânever âad a friend all my days, anâ donât want one but I likes Black JargeâI pities, anâ I despises âim.â
âWhy do you despise him?â
Because âe carries on so, all about a Eveâwây, theer ainât a woman breathinâ as is worth a manâs troublinâ âis lead over, no, nor never will beâyet âereâs Black Jarge readyâah! anâ more than willinâ to get âisself âung, anâ all for a wenchâa Eveââ
âGet, himself hanged?â I repeated.
âAh âung! wây, ainât âe a-waitinâ anâ a-waitinâ to get at this coveâthis cove wiâ the nice white âands anâ the takinâ ways, ainât âe awatchinâ anâ a-watchinâ to meet âim some lonely night âand when âe do meet âimââ The Pedler sighed.
âWell?â
âWây, thereâll be blood shedâblood!âquarts on itâbuckets on it! Black Jargeâll batter this âere coveâs âead soft, so sure as I were baptized Richard âeâll lift this cove up in âis great, strong arms, anâ âeâll throw this cove down, anâ âeâll gore âim, anâ stamp âim down under âis feet, anâ this coveâs bloodâll go soakinâ anâ a-soakinâ into the grass, someâeres beneath some âedge, or in some quiet corner oâ the woodsâand the birdsâll perch on this coveâs breast, anâ flutter their wings in this coveâs face, âcause theyâll know as this cove can never do nobody no âurt no wore; ah! thereâll be bloodâgallons of it!â
âI hope not!â said I. âYe do, do ye?â
âMost fervently!â
âAnâ âcause why?â
âBecause I happen to be that cove,â I answered.
âOh!â said the Pedler, eyeing me more narrowly; âyou are, are ye?â
âI am!â
âYet you ainât got wâite âands.â
âThey were white once,â said I.
âAnâ I donât see as your ways is softânor yet takinâ!â
âNone the less, I am that cove!â
âOh!â repeated the Pedler, and, having turned this intelligence over in his mind, spat thoughtfully into the shadow again. âYou wonât be wantinâ ever a broom, I think you said?â
âNo,â said I.
âVery well then!â he nodded, and, lifting his brooms, made towards the cottage door!
âWhere are you going?â
âTo sleep in this âere empty âut.â
âBut it isnât empty!â
âSo much the better,â nodded the Pedler, âgood night!â and, with the words, he laid his hand upon the door, but, as he did so, it opened, and Charmian appeared. The Pedler fell back three or four paces, staring with round eyes.
âBy Goles!â he exclaimed. âSo you are married then?â
Now, when he said this I felt suddenly hot all over, even to the very tips of my ears, and, for the life of me, I could not have looked at Charmian.
âWhyâwhyââ I began, but her smooth, soft voice came to my rescue.
âNoâhe is not married,â said she, âfar from it.â
âNot?â said the Pedler, âso much the better; marriage ainât love, no, nor love ainât marriageâIâm a married cove myself, so I know what Iâm a-sayinâ; if folk do talk, anâ shake their âeads over yeâwây, let âem, only donâtâdonât go a-spilinâ things by gettinâ âchurched.â Youâre a woman, but youâre a fine unâa dasher, by Goles, nice anâ straight-backed, anâ round, anâ plump if I was this âere cove, now, I know whatââ
âHere,â said I hastily, âhereâsell me a broom!â
The Pedler drew a broom from his bundle and passed it to me.
âOne shillinâ and sixpence!â said he, which sum I duly paid over. âDonât,â he continued, pocketing the money, and turning to Charmian, âdonât go spilinâ things by lettinâ this young cove go a-marryinâ anâ a-churchinâ yeânobody never got married as didnât repent it some time or other, anâ wotâs more, when Marriage comes in at the door, Love flies out up the chimbleyâanâ there yâare! Now, if you loves this young cove, wây, very good! if this âere young cove loves youâwhich ainât to be wondered atâso much the better, but donâtâdonât go a-marryinâ each other, anââas for the childrenââ
âComeâIâll take a beltâgive me a belt!â said I, more hastily than before.
âA belt?â said the Pedler.
âA belt, yes.â
âWiâ a fine steel buckle made inââ
âYesâyes!â said I.
âTwo shillinâ anâ sixpence!â said the Pedler.
âWhen I saw you last time, you offered much the same belt for a shilling,â I demurred.
âAh!â nodded the Pedler, âbut belts is rizââarf-a-crownâs the priceâtake it or leave it.â
âItâs getting late,â said I, slipping the money into his hand, âand Iâll wish you good night!â
âYouâre in a âurry about it, ainât you?â
âYes.â
âAhâto be sure!â nodded the fellow, looking from me to Charmian with an evil leer, âearly to bed anâââ
âComeâget off!â said I angrily.
âWotâare ye goinâ to turn me awayâat this time oâ night!â
âIt is not so far to Sissinghurst!â said I:
âBut, Lord! I wouldnât disturb yeâanâ thereâs two rooms, ainât there?â
âThere are plenty of comfortable beds to be had at âThe Bull.ââ
âSo you wonât giâe me a nightâs shelter, eh?â
âNo,â I answered, greatly annoyed by the fellowâs persistence.
âAnâ you donât want to buy nothinâ for the young womanâa necklaceâor, sayâa pair
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