Uncle Silas J. Sheridan Le Fanu (good books to read for beginners .TXT) đ
- Author: J. Sheridan Le Fanu
Book online «Uncle Silas J. Sheridan Le Fanu (good books to read for beginners .TXT) đ». Author J. Sheridan Le Fanu
When I returned, having made this dispositions, I perceived how pale the girl was.
âAre you ill, Meg?â I asked.
âNever ye mind. Well enough. Listen, Miss; I must tell it all in a crack, anâ if she calls, rin awaâ to her, and leâ me to myself, for if fayther or tâother âun wor to kotch me here, I think theyâd kill me aâmost. Hish!â
She paused a second, looking askance, in the direction where she fancied Mary Quince was. Then she resumed in a whisperâ â
âNow, lass, mind ye, yeâll keep what I say to yourself. Youâre not to tell that âun nor any other for your life, mind, a word oâ what Iâm goinâ to tell ye.â
âIâll not say a word. Go on.â
âDid ye see Dudley?â
âI think I saw him getting up the ladder.â
âIn the mill? Ha! thatâs him. He never went beyond Todcaster. He stayed in Feltram after.â
It was my turn to look pale now. My worst conjecture was established.
XXI I ConspireâThatâs a bad âun, he isâ âoh, Miss, Miss Maud! Itâs nout thatâs good as keeps him anâ faytherâ â(mind, lass, ye promised you would not tell no one)â âas keeps them two a-talkinâ and a-smokinâ secret-like together in the mill. Anâ fayther donât know I found him out. They donât let me into the town, but Brice tells me, and he knows itâs Dudley; and itâs nout thatâs good, but summat very bad. Anâ I reckon, Miss, itâs all about you. Be ye frightened, Miss Maud?â
I felt on the point of fainting, but I rallied.
âNot much, Meg. Go on, for Heavenâs sake. Does Uncle Silas know he is here?â
âWell, Miss, they were with him, Brice told me, from eleven oâclock to nigh one oâ Tuesday night, anâ went in and come out like thieves, âfeard yeâd see âem.â
âAnd how does Brice know anything bad?â I asked, with a strange freezing sensation creeping from my heels to my head and down againâ âI am sure deadly pale, but speaking very collectedly.
âBrice said, Miss, he saw Dudley a-cryinâ and lookinâ awful black, and says he to fayther, âââTisnât in my line nohow, anâ I canât;â and says fayther to he, âNo one likes they soart oâ things, but how can ye help it? The old boyâs behind ye wiâ his pitchfork, and ye canna stop.â Anâ wiâ that he bethought him oâ Brice, and says he, âWhat be ye a-doinâ there? Get ye down wiâ the nags to blacksmith, do ye.â Anâ oop gits Dudley, pullinâ his hat ower his brows, anâ says he, âI wish I was in the Seamew. Iâm good for nout wiâ this thing a-hanginâ ower me.â Anâ thatâs all as Brice heard. Anâ heâs afeard oâ fayther and Dudley awful. Dudley could lick him to pot if he crossed him, and he and fayther âud think nout oâ havinâ him afore the justices for poachinâ, and swearinâ him into gaol.â
âBut why does he think itâs about me?â
âHish!â said Meg, who fancied she heard a sound, but all was quiet. âI canât sayâ âweâre in danger, lass. I donât know whyâ âbut he does, anâ so do I, anâ, for that matter, so do ye.â
âMeg, Iâll leave Bartram.â
âYe canât.â
âCanât. What do you mean, girl?â
âThey wonât let ye oot. The gates is all locked. Theyâve dogsâ âtheyâve bloodhounds, Brice says. Ye canât git oot, mind; put that oot oâ your head.
âI tell ye what yeâll do. Write a bit oâ a note to the lady yonder at Elverston; anâ though Brice be a wild fellah, and âappen not ower good sometimes, he likes me, anâ Iâll make him take it. Fayther will be grindinâ at mill tomorrow. Coom ye here about one oâclockâ âthatâs if ye see the mill-sails a-turninââ âand me and Brice will meet ye here. Bring that old lass wiâ ye. Thereâs an old French âun, though, that talks wiâ Dudley. Mind ye, that âun knows nout oâ the matter. Brice be a kind lad to me, whatsoeâer he be wiâ others, and I think he wonât split. Now, lass, I must go. God help ye; God bless ye; anâ, for the worldâs wealth, donât ye let one oâ them see yeâve got ought in your head, not even that âun.â
Before I could say another word, the girl had glided from me, with a wild gesture of silence, and a shake of her head.
I canât at all account for the state in which I was. There are resources both of energy and endurance in human nature which we never suspect until the tremendous voice of necessity summons them into play. Petrified with a totally new horror, but with something of the coldness and impassiveness of the transformation, I stood, spoke, and actedâ âa wonder, almost a terror, to myself.
I met Madame on my return as if nothing had happened. I heard her ugly gabble, and looked at the fruits of her hourâs shopping, as I might hear, and see, and talk, and smile, in a dream.
But the night was dreadful. When Mary Quince and I were alone, I locked the door. I continued walking up and down the room, with my hands clasped, looking at the inexorable floor, the walls, the ceiling, with a sort of imploring despair. I was afraid to tell my dear old Mary. The least indiscretion would be failure, and failure destruction.
I answered her perplexed solicitudes by telling her that I was not very wellâ âthat I was uneasy; but I did not fail to extract from her a promise that she would not hint to mortal, either my suspicions about Dudley, or our rencontre with Meg Hawkes.
I remember how, when, after we had got, late at night, into bed, I sat up, shivering with horror, in mine, while honest Maryâs tranquil breathing told how soundly she slept. I got up, and looked from the window,
Comments (0)