The Broad Highway by Jeffery Farnol (ebook reader with highlight function TXT) đ
- Author: Jeffery Farnol
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âWhy, you never axed me as I remember,â growled the fellow.
Slipping my knapsack from my shoulders, I sat down at a small table in a corner while the man, with a final kick at the fire, went to give my order. In a few minutes he reappeared with some billets of wood beneath his arm, and followed by a merry-eyed, rosy-cheeked lass, who proceeded, very deftly, to lay a snowy cloth and thereupon in due season, a dish of savory ham and golden-yolked eggs.
âItâs a lovely morning!â said I, lifting my eyes to her comely face.
âIt is indeed, sir,â said she, setting down the cruet with a turn of her slender wrist.
âWhich I make so bold as to deny,â said the surly man, dropping the wood on the hearth with a prodigious clatter, ââow can any morning be lovely when there ainât no love in itâno, not so much as would fill a thimble? I say it ainât a lovely morning, not by no manner oâ means, and what I says I ainât ashamed on, being a natârally truthful man!â With which words he sighed, kicked the fire again, and stumped out.
âOur friend would seem somewhat gloomy this morning,â said I.
âHeâve been that way a fortnight now, come Satuâday,â replied the slim lass, nodding.
âOh?â said I.
âYes,â she continued, checking a smile, and sighing instead; âitâs very sad, heâve been crossed in love you see, sir.â
âPoor fellow!â said I, âcanât you try to console him?â
âMe, sirâoh no!â
âAnd why not? I should think you might console a man for a great deal.â
âWhy, you see, sir,â said she, blushing and dimpling very prettily, âit do so happen as Iâm the one as crossed him.â
âAh!âI understand,â said I.
âIâm to be married to a farmerâdown the road yonder; leastways, I havenât quite made up my mind yet.â
âA fine, tall fellow?â I inquired.
âYesâdo âee know him, sir?â
âWith a handsome pair of black whiskers?â said I.
âThe very same, sir, and they do be handsome whiskers, though I do say it.â
âThe finest I ever saw. I wish you every happiness,â said I.
âThankee sir, Iâm sure,â said she, and, dimpling more prettily than ever, she tripped away, and left me to my repast.
And when I had assuaged my hunger, I took out the pipe of Adam, the groom, the pipe shaped like a negroâs head, and, calling for a paper of tobacco, I filled and lighted the pipe, and sat staring dreamily out of the window.
Happy is that man who, by reason of an abundant fortune, knows not the meaning of the word hunger; but thrice happy is he who, when the hand of famine pinches, may stay his craving with such a meal as this of mine. Never before, and never since have I tasted just such eggs, and such hamâso tender! so delicate! so full of flavor! It is a memory that can never fade. Indeed, sometimes (even now), when I grow hungry, (about dinner-time) I see once more the surly-faced man, the rosy-cheeked waiting-maid, and the gloomy chamber of the âOld Cockâ tavern as I saw them upon that early May morning of the year of grace 18â.
So I sat, with a contented mind, smoking my pipe, and staring out at the falling summer rain. And presently, chancing to turn my eyes up the road, I beheld a chaise that galloped in a smother of mud. As I watched its rapid approach, the postilion swung his horses towards the inn, and a moment later had pulled up before the door. They had evidently travelled fast and far, for the chaise was covered with dirt; and the poor horses, in a lather of foam, hung their heads, while their flanks heaved distressfully.
The chaise door was now thrown open, and three gentlemen alighted. The first was a short, plethoric individual, bull-necked and loud of voice, for I could hear him roundly cursing the post-boy for some fault; the second was a tall, languid gentleman, who carried a flat, oblong box beneath one arm, and who paused to fondle his whisker, and look up at the inn with an exaggerated air of disgust; while the third stood mutely by, his hands thrust into the pockets of his greatcoat, and stared straight before him.
The three of them entered the room together, and, while the languid gentleman paused to survey himself in the small, cracked mirror that hung against the wall, the plethoric individual bustled to the fire, and, loosening his coats and neckerchief, spread out his hands to the blaze.
âA good half-hour before our time,â said he, glancing towards the third gentleman, who stood looking out of the window with his hands still deep in his pockets; âwe did the last ten miles well under the hourâcome, what do you say to a glass of brandy?â
At this, his languid companion turned from the mirror, and I noticed that he, too, glanced at the silent figure by the window.
âBy all means,â said he, âthough Sir Jasper would hardly seem in a drinking humor,â and, with the very slightest shrug of the shoulders, he turned back to the mirror again.
âNo, Mr. Chester, I am notâin a drinking humor,â answered Sir Jasper, without turning round, or taking his eyes from the window.
âSir Jasper?â said I to myself, ânow where, and in what connection, have I heard such a name before?â
He was of a slight build, and seemingly younger than either of his companions by some years, but what struck me particularly about him was the extreme pallor of his face. I noticed also a peculiar habit he had of moistening his lips at frequent intervals with the tip of his tongue, and there was, besides, something in the way he stared at the trees, the wet road, and the gray skyâa strange wide-eyed intensityâthat drew and held my attention.
âDevilish weatherâdevilish, on my life and soul!â exclaimed the short, red-faced man, in a loud, peevish tone, tugging viciously at the bell-rope, âhot one day, cold the next, now sun, now rainâ Oh, damn it! Now in Franceâah, what a climateâheavenly âpositively divine; say what you will of a Frenchman, damn him by all means, but the climate, the country, and the womenâwho would not worship âem?â
âExactly!â said the languid gentleman, examining a pimple upon his chin with a high degree of interest, âalways âdored a Frenchwoman myself; theyâre soâso ahâso deuced French, though mark you, Selby,â he broke off, as the rosy-cheeked maid appeared with the brandy and glasses,â though mark you, thereâs much to be said for your English country wenches, after all,â saying which, he slipped his arm about the girlâs round waist. There was the sound of a kiss, a muffled shriek, and she had run from the room, slamming the door behind her, whereupon the languid gentleman went back to his pimple.
âOh! as to that, Chester, I quarrel only with the climate. God made England, and the devil sends the weather!â
âSelby,â said Sir Jasper, in the same repressed tone that he had used before and still without taking his eyes from the gray prospect of sky and tree and winding road, âthere is no fairer land, in all the world, than this England of ours; it were a good thing to dieâfor England, but that is a happiness reserved for comparatively few.â And, with the words, he sighed, a strange, fluttering sigh, and thrust his hands deeper into his pockets.
âDie!â repeated the man Selby, in a loud, boisterous way. âWho talks of death?â
âDeuced unpleasant subject!â said the other, with a shrug at the cracked mirror. âSomething so infernally cold and clammy about itâlike the weather.â
âAnd yet it will be a glorious day later. The clouds are thinning already,â Sir Jasper went on; âstrange, but I never realized, until this morning, how greenâand wonderfulâeverything is!â
The languid Mr. Chester forgot the mirror, and turned to stare at Sir Jasperâs back, with raised brows, while the man Selby shook his head, and smiled unpleasantly. As he did so, his eye encountered me, where I sat, quietly in my corner, smoking my negro-head pipe, and his thick brows twitched sharply together in a frown.
âIn an hourâs time, gentlemen,â pursued Sir Jasper, âwe shall write âfinisâ to a more or less interesting incident, and I beg of you, in that hour, to remember my prophecyâthat it would be a glorious day, later.â
Mr. Chester filled a glass, and crossing to the speaker, tendered it to him without a word; as for Selby, he stood stolidly enough, his hands thrust truculently beneath his coat-tails, frowning at me.
âCome,â said Mr. Chester persuasively, âJust a bracer!â Sir Jasper shook his head, but next moment reached out a white, unsteady hand, and raised the brandy to his lips; yet as he drank, I saw the spirit slop over, and trickle from his chin.
âThanks, Chester,â said he, returning the empty glass; âis it time we started yet?â
âItâs just half-past seven,â answered Mr. Chester, consulting his watch, âand Iâm rather hazy as to the exact place.â
âDeepdene Wood,â said Sir Jasper dreamily.
âYou know the place?â
âOh, yes!â
âThen we may as well start, if you are ready?â
âYes, it will be cool and fresh, outside.â
âSettle the bill, Selby, weâll walk on slowly,â said Mr. Chester, and, with a last glance at the mirror, he slipped his arm within Sir Jasperâs, and they went out together.
Mr. Selby meanwhile rang for the bill, frowning at me all the time.
âWhat the devil are you staring at?â he demanded suddenly, in a loud, bullying tone.
âIf you are pleased to refer to me, sir,â said I, âI would say that my eyes were given for use, and that having used them upon you, I have long since arrived at the conclusion that I donât like you.â
âAh?â said he, frowning fiercer than ever.
âYes,â said I, âthough whether it is your person, your manner, or your voice that displeases me most, I am unable to say.â
âAn impertinent young jackanapes!â said he; âdamnation, I think Iâll pull your nose!â
âWhy, you may try, and welcome, sir,â said I; âthough I should advise you not, for should you make the attempt I should be compelled to throw you out of the window.â
At this moment the pretty maid appeared, and tendered him the bill with a curtesy. He glanced at it, tossed some money upon the table, and turned to stare at me again.
âIf ever I meet you againââ he began.
âYouâd probably know me,â I put in.
âWithout a doubt,â he answered, putting on his hat and buttoning his befrogged surtout; âand should you,â he continued, drawing on his gloves, âshould you stare at me with those damned, impertinent fishesâ eyes of yours, I should, most certainly, pull your nose for youâon the spot, sir.â
âAnd I should as certainly throw you out of the window!â I nodded.
âAn impertinent young jackanapes!â said he again, and went out, banging the door behind him. Glancing from the window, I saw him catch up with the other two, and all three walk on together down the road. Sir Jasper was in the middle, and I noticed that his hands were still deep in his pockets. Now, as I watched their forms getting smaller and smaller in the distance, there grew upon me a feeling that he who walked between would nevermore come walking back.
And, in a little, having knocked out
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