The Broad Highway by Jeffery Farnol (ebook reader with highlight function TXT) đ
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âVery well then!â he shouted, âI âopes as you gets your âead knocked offâah!âanâ gets it knocked off soon!â Having said which, he spat up into the air towards me, and trudged off.
CHAPTER XIV
CONCERNING BLACK GEORGEâS LETTER
It was with a feeling of great relief that I watched the fellow out of sight; nevertheless his very presence seemed to have left a blight upon all things, for he, viewing matters with the material eye of Common-sense, had, thereby, contaminated themâeven the air seemed less pure and sweet than it had been heretofore, so that, glancing over my shoulder, I was glad to see that Charmian had re-entered the cottage.
âHere,â said I to myself, âhere is Common-sense in the shape of a half-witted peddling fellow, blundering into Arcadia, in the shape of a haunted cottage, a woman, and a man. Straightway our Pedler, being Common-sense, misjudges usâas, indeed, would every other common-sense individual the world over; for Arcadia, being of itself abstract and immaterial, is opposed to, and incapable of being understood by concrete common-sense, and always will be âand thereâs the rub! And yet,â said I, âthanks to the Wanderer of the Roads, who built this cottage and hanged himself here, and thanks to a Highland Scot who performed wonderfully on the bagpipes, there is little chance of any common-sense vagrant venturing near Arcadia againâat least until the woman is gone, or the man is gone, orââ
Here, going to rub my chin (being somewhat at a loss), I found that I had been standing, all this while, the broom in one hand and the belt in the other, and now, hearing a laugh behind me, I turned, and saw Charmian was leaning in the open doorway watching me.
âAnd so you are theâthe coveâwith the white hands and the taking ways, are you, Peter?â
âWhyâyou were actuallyâlistening then?â
âWhy, of course I was.â
âThat,â said I, âthat was veryâundignified!â
âBut veryâfeminine, Peter!â Hereupon I threw the belt from me one way, and the broom the other, and sitting down upon the bench began to fill any pipe rather awkwardly, being conscious of Charmianâs mocking scrutiny.
âPoorâpoor Black George!â she sighed.
âWhat do you mean by that?â said I quickly.
âReally I can almost understand his being angry with you.â
âWhy?â
âYou walked with her, and talked with her, Peterâlike Caesar, âyou came, you saw, you conqueredâ!â
Here I dragged my tinder-box from my pocket so awkwardly as to bring the lining with it.
âAndâeven smiled at her, Peterâand you so rarely smile!â
Having struck flint and steel several times without success, I thrust the tinder-box back into my pocket and fixed my gaze upon the moon.
âIs she so very pretty, Peter?â
I stared up at the moon without answering.
âI wonder if you bother her with your Epictetus andâand dry-as-dust quotations?â
I bit my lips and stared up at the moon.
âOr perhaps she likes your musty books and philosophy?â
But presently, finding that I would not speak, Charmian began to sing, very sweet and low, as if to herself, yet, when I chanced to glance towards her, I found her mocking eyes still watching me. Now the words of her song were these:
âO, my luveâs like a red, red rose, Thatâs newly sprung in June; O, my luveâs like the melodie Thatâs sweetly played in tune.âAnd so, at last, unable to bear it any longer, I rose and, taking my candle, went into my room and closed the door. But I had been there scarcely five minutes when Charmian knocked.
âOh, Peter! I wish to speak to youâplease.â Obediently I opened the door.
âWhat is it, Charmian?â
âYou dropped this from your pocket when you took out your tinder-box so clumsily!â said she, holding towards me a crumpled paper. And looking down at it, I saw that it was Black Georgeâs letter to Prudence.
Now, as I took it from her, I noticed that her hand trembled, while in her eyes I read fear and trouble; and seeing this, I was, for a moment, unwontedly glad, and then wondered at myself.
âYouâdid not read itâof course?â said I, well knowing that she had.
âYes, Peterâit lay open, andââ
âThen,â said I, speaking my thought aloud, âyou know that she loves George.â
âHe means you harm,â said she, speaking with her head averted, âand, if he killed youââ
âI should be spared a deal of sorrow, andâand mortification, andâother people would be no longer bothered by Epictetus and dry-as-dust quotations.â She turned suddenly, and, crossing to the open doorway, stood leaning there. âBut, indeed,â I went on hurriedly, âthere is no chance of such a thing happeningânot the remotest. Black Georgeâs bark is a thousand times worse than his bite; this letter means nothing, andâerânothing at all,â I ended, somewhat lamely, for she had turned and was looking at me over her shoulder.
âIf he has to âwait and wait, and follow you and follow youâ?â said she, in the same low tone.
âThose are merely the words of a half-mad pedler,â said I.
ââAnd your blood will go soaking, and soaking into the grassâ!â
âOur Pedler has a vivid imagination!â said I lightly. But she shook her head, and turned to look out upon the beauty of the night once more, while I watched her, chin in hand.
âI was angry with you to-night, Peter,â said she at length, âbecause you ordered me to do something against my willâand I âdid it; and so, I tried to torment youâyou will forgive me for that, wonât you?â
âThere is nothing to forgive, nothing, andâgood night, Charmian.â Here she turned, and, coming to me, gave me her hand.
âCharmian Brown will always think of you as aââ
âBlacksmith!â said I.
âAs a blacksmith!â she repeated, looking at me with a gleam in her eyes, âbut oftener as aââ
âPedant!â said I.
âAs a pedant!â she repeated obediently, âbut most of all as aââ
âWell?â said I.
âAs aâman,â she ended, speaking with bent head. And here again I was possessed of a sudden gladness that was out of all reason, as I immediately told myself.
âYour hand is very small,â said I, finding nothing better to say, âsmaller even than I thought.â
âIs it?â and she smiled and glanced up at me beneath her lashes, for her head was still bent.
âAnd wonderfully smooth and soft!â
âIs it?â said she again, but this time she did not look up at me. Now another man might have stooped and kissed those slender, shapely fingersâbut, as for me, I loosed them, rather suddenly, and, once more bidding her good night, re-entered my own chamber, and closed the door.
But to-night, lying upon my bed, I could not sleep, and fell to watching the luminous patch of sky framed in my open casement. I thought of Charmian, of her beauty, of her strange whims and fancies, her swift-changing moods and her contrariness, comparing her, in turn, to all those fair women I had ever read of or dreamed over in my books. Little by little, however, my thoughts drifted to Gabbing Dick and Black George, and, with my mindâs eye, I could see him as he was (perhaps at this very moment), fierce-eyed and grim of mouth, sitting beneath some hedgerow, while, knife in hand, he trimmed and trimmed his two bludgeons, one of which was to batter the life out of me. From such disquieting reflections I would turn my mind to sweet-eyed Prudence, to the Ancient, the forge, and the thousand and one duties of the morrow. I bethought me, once more, of the storm, of the coming of Charmian, of the fierce struggle in the dark, of the Postilion, and of Charmian again. And yet, in despite of me, my thoughts would revert to George, and I would see myself even as the Pedler pictured me, out in some secluded corner of the woods, lying stiffly upon my back with glassy eyes staring up sightlessly through the whispering leaves above, while my blood soaked and soaked into the green, and with a blackbird singing gloriously upon my motionless breast.
CHAPTER XV
WHICH, BEING IN PARENTHESIS, MAY BE SKIPPED IF THE READER SO DESIRE
As this life is a Broad Highway along which we must all of us pass whether we will or no; as it is a thoroughfare sometimes very hard and cruel in the going, and beset by many hardships, sometimes desolate and hatefully monotonous, so, also, must its aspect, sooner or later, change for the better, and, the stony track overpassed, the choking heat and dust left behind, we may reach some green, refreshing haven shady with trees, and full of the cool, sweet sound of running waters. Then who shall blame us if we pause unduly in this grateful shade, and, lying upon our backs a while, gaze up through the swaying green of trees to the infinite blue beyond, ere we journey on once more, as soon we must, to front whatsoever of good or evil lies waiting for us in the hazy distance.
To just such a place am I now come, in this, my history; the record of a period which I, afterwards, remembered as the happiest I had ever known, the memory of which must remain with me, green and fragrant everlastingly.
If, in the forthcoming pages, you shall find over-much of Charmian, I would say, in the first place, that it is by her, and upon her, that this narrative hangs; and, in the second place, that in this part of my story I find my greatest pleasure; though here, indeed, I am faced with a great difficulty, seeing that I must depict, as faithfully as may be, that most difficult, that most elusive of all created things, to witâa woman.
Truly, I begin to fear lest my pen fail me altogether for the very reason that it is of Charmian that I would tell, and of Charmian I understand little more than nothing; for what rule has ever been devised whereby a womanâs mind may be accurately gauged, and who of all those wise ones who have written hitherto âpoets, romancers, or historiansâhas ever fathomed the why and wherefore of the Mind Feminine?
A fool indeed were I to attempt a thing impossible; I do but seek to show her to you as I saw her, and to describe her in so far as I learned to know her.
And yet, how may I begin? I might tell you that her nose was neither arched nor straight, but perfect, none the less; I might tell you of her brows, straight and low, of her eyes, long and heavy-lashed, of her chin, firm and round and dimpled; and yet, that would not be Charmian. For I could not paint you the scarlet witchery of her mouth with its sudden, bewildering changes, nor show you how sweetly the lower lip curved up to meet its mate. I might tell you that to look into her eyes was like gazing down into very deep water, but I could never give you their varying beauty, nor the way she had with her lashes; nor can I ever describe her rich, warm coloring, nor the lithe grace of her body.
Thus it is that
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