Doctor Syn by Russell Thorndyke (10 best novels of all time .txt) đ
- Author: Russell Thorndyke
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Sexton Mipps and the gentleman who had worn the bottle-green coat then unlocked an old chest and took out certain money bags which they emptied on the table. The third gentleman, whom they addressed as the Scarecrow, helped them to sort the coin, French in one pile, English in another, and then referring to a list of names in the register, the three managers of the secret bank proportioned out their servantsâ wages. When this was accomplished the gentleman who had worn the bottle-green coat presented his little account, which was promptly paid in golden guineas, and he left them, saying that he was very sorry that it was the last time that he would draw so many golden Georges from the bank.
âYes, the bank closes accounts to-day,â said the Scarecrow, striking his name off the list, âthough perhaps some day we shall open it again. Who knows?â
âLetâs hope so,â said the other, shaking hands with the Scarecrow and the sexton, âand letâs hope we meet again. Good-bye.â And he was gone, IViipps locking the door behind him.
âItâs all right to a penny,â said the Scarecrow.
âHooray! I calls it,â chuckled Sexton Mipps, rubbing his hands together. âIâll get this little lot of coinage nailed up in a coflfin and sent to Calais, and old Whatâs-his-name wotâs just gone up the stairs has arranged with the Calais people to get it transferred to the Bank of Lyons, so you can get at it yourself from Marseilles, canât you?â
âYes, weâre all square now. Everything shipshape. Mother Waggetts Iâve settled with, and Imogene gets the iron-bound casket. Iâve seen to it all. But itâs time I was off. Iâve a certain gentleman to see before nightfall.â
âWhoâs that?â asked Mipps.
âThe squire,â replied the Scarecrow, laughing as he tied up the money bags.
âAnd I have a gentleman to visit, too,â said Mipps.
âWhoâs that.f^â asked the Scarecrow.
âParson Syn, Doctor Syn, the worthy vicar,â replied Mipps, winking, at which the Scarecrow laughed and went out of the crypt.
Mipps, after locking up the money in the chest, followed leisurely, and as he crossed the churchyard he saw Doctor Syn ringing the front door bell of the Court House.
âWell,â murmured Mipps to himself, âIâve met one or two of âem in my time, but heâs a blinkinâ marvel.â
âDO YOU mean to say that youâre going to leave Dymchurch?â
The squire was positively angry, a thing he had never been with Doctor Syn in all the years that he had known him. âYou are undoubtedly pulling my legâthatâs what youâre doing. God bless my soul, sir, thereâs precious few fellows can do that, and precious few that dare try; but thatâs what youâre doing, isnât it?â
âIâm afraid not, Sir Antony. My dear squire, my good friend, I am afraid that for once in my life I am most dreadfully in earnest.â
âBut what donât you like about the place? Is it something Iâve done? Do you want your stipend raised? Damme, Iâll treble the blessed thing, if itâs that. Oh, itâs that rascally son of mine thatâs been putting you out. Itâs that Denis scamp, who never took to his books and never will. But Iâll make him. Iâll take my riding whip to the young whelp if he causes you pain. It is he! Heâs at the bottom of it. My soul and body, Iâll give the young puppy a shaking up. He doesnât know a good tutor when he sees one. The impertinent young popinjay! Doesnât appreciate anything. No! God bless my soul, why heâs no more respect for me than a five-barred gate. Heâs always doing something to jar me. Why, do you know, that the cool-faced young malefactor announced the other day in the most insolent manner that he was going to marry a barmaid? Yes, I assure you he did. He announced to me, sir, in the most condescending tones, as if he were conferring an inestimable favour upon my head, that he thought I ran a very good chance of having that girl Imogene for my daughter-in-law. You know Imogene, that serves and waits and does innumerable dirty jobs at the Ship Inn; and when I expostulated in fatherly tones, why, bless me, if the young spitfire didnât fly into a passion, crying out that it was high time one of the Cobtrees introduced some good looks into the family. Said that to me, mind youâhis natural father that brought him into the world. I told him that, used those very words, and what does he do but begin to bow and scrape and praise and thank me for bringing him into the world at the same period as that black-haired bargirl, just as if his mother and I had timed the thing to a nicety! Why, when I come to think of it, sheâs the daughter of a common pirate, that rascally, scoundrelly Clegg, who was hanged at Rye. Isnât she now? And sheâs to be my daughter-in-law! Now, Doctor Syn, in the name of Romney Marsh, what the devilâI say, what the devil would you do if you had a son like that to deal with?â
The squire absolutely had to stop for breath, and Doctor Syn, who had been vainly trying to get a word in edgewise, replied: âWell, sir, I should candidly confess that my son was a lucky dog if he succeeded in getting her, and which, I should very much doubt. In fact, were I in your place, I should go so far as to bet my wig that he would never win the girl. Iâm very fond of Denis, devoted to him in fact, but Iâm afraid heâll have a great difficulty in marrying Imogene.â
âI should damn well bet my eyes he will, sir! I need none to tell me that. Difficulty in marrying her? Aye, that he will. My son will marry position, sirâmoney, sirâand if beauty comes along of it, well, then, beauty, sir, and all the better for my son, sir.â
âAnd provided of course that the lady is willing,â put in the vicar.
âWilling .f^ What minx wouldnât be only too damned willing to marry my sonâold Cobtreeâs son; and not so old either, sir, eh?^ Why, any woman would jump at the chance! And as for a bargirl, the daughter of a dirty pirate hanged in that silly conceited little town of Rye, why, poohpooh, my dear Doctor! Laughable!â
âWell, I think differently in this case. Squire,â said the Doctor. âI should call Denis a lucky dog. I might even stretch a point and, at the risk of being unfrocked, say a damned lucky dog if he succeeded in marrying that girl Imogene.â
âWhat?â cried the squire.
âOf course,â said the Doctor, âyou mustnât go entirely by what I say, because I hold myself very seriously gifted in the judging of attractive women.â
âAnd so do I, sir. I know sheâs attractive. A damned fine, upstanding young woman, and if she were even a county pauper I might stretch a point and accept her, but beauty comes last on my list.â
âBut Imogene possesses all the other necessaries required. Rich she is, and very rich, though she doesnât know it, and although her mother was but a dancer in a Raratonga gambling saloon, she was descended direct from an Incan princess, and as you said * poohpoohâ to me, sir, why, Iâll say âpoohâ back, sir: âpoohâ to your Kentish ladies of quality, for when Imogene comes into her own, why, damme, she could chuck their fortunes on to every horse in the village steeplechase.â
âIs she so very wealthyâthat girl at the Ship Inn? Well, perhaps I am wrong in saying that the match is so very uneven. Perhaps I am.â
âYes,â went on the vicar, âthere is just the possibility that it might be brought to a successful issue, though if youâll excuse my saying so, you are so very tactless at times, Squire.â
âWhat do you mean?â cried the squire hotly. âI am none too sure that I should care for my son to marry a bargirl, though she were the daughter of Croesus himself.â
âMy dear Squire, cahn yourself, I beg. As a barmaid I admit Imogene is below Denis as regards position, but as an Incan princess, why, my dear friend, she is as far superior to the Cobtrees of the Court House as the reigning house of England. Why, do you know anythingâbut of course you doâof the pride, the magnificence, the omnipotent splendour possessed by the Incan kings?^ Why, the Palace of Whitehall would compare most unfavourably with their sculleries.â
âNo? Really? âsaid the squire.
âAnd itâs for the wealth and fortunes of Imogene that I must leave you,â went on the clericââthat is, leave you for a time, you understand? For although I shall bestow upon her certain things of value that I hold as her guardian, the bulk of her fortune has been lying idle, but now that she is growing into womanhood, it is high time I fulfilled my duties and lifted her money for her.â
âThen sheâs your adopted child, is she?â said the squire, pushing his wig back and scratching his head.
âWell, I suppose thatâs how it stands in a sense,â replied the Doctor. âWhen that rascal Clegg died he actually paid me a good sum of money to see that his daughter was provided for, and of course Iâve kept that money for her till she came to years of discretion. He also told me where Englandâs treasure was buried, and thatâs what Iâm off to get.â
âEnglandâs treasure? Whatâs that?â asked the amazed squire.
âClegg was a partner of England, the notorious pirate. It is said that he killed England in a quarrel, though nothing was proved of it. Anyhow, Clegg was the only man who knew of the hidingplace, and at his death he imparted the secret to me, after I had given solemn oath upon the Bible to keep it to myself.â
âGod bless my soul!â said the squire, leaping to his feet; âand do you mean to say that youâve kept the secret all this time and not fitted out a ship and gone to lift it? Why, there may be millions there!â
âThere are,â said Doctor Syn. âIâm certain of that. Thatâs why Iâve been at pains to keep the whole matter to myself, not even telling the girl, for it will want careful handling. Once let any one know that I am off to lift Cleggâs treasure-chests, and all the dogs in Christendom will be nosing on my trail. Clegg had the same fear of this secret being stolen and so committed the exact lie of the island to my memory, and to no artificial map, but he did it so uncommon well that I can see point, bays, lagoons, soundings, and tracks just as if I had piloted ships there all my life.â
âThen all this pious talk of wanting to go out as a mission preacher to the smelly blacks is simply balderdash, and you havenât had a ridiculous âcallâ at all?â
âMerely a cloak to hide my real designs.â
âGood Lord deliver us!â said the squire, pushing his wig clean off and allowing it to lie unheeded on the floor.
Just then there entered a servant who announced to the squire that the girl from
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