God's Good Man by Marie Corelli (best young adult book series .txt) đ
- Author: Marie Corelli
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âGood-night, Ambassador Josey!â
Josey waved his old hat energetically.
âGood-night, my beauty! Good-night to Squireâs gel! Good-nightââ
But before he could pile on any more epithets, she was gone, and the butler Primmins stood in her place.
âIâll help give you a lift down to the gates,â he said, surveying Josey with considerable interest; âYouâre a game old chap for your age!â
Josey was still waving his hat to the dark embrasure through which Marylliaâs white figure had vanished.
âAinât she a beauty? Ainât she jest a real Vancourt pride?â he demanded excitedly; âLord! We wonât know ourselves in a month or two! You marrk my wurrds, boys! See if what I say donât come true! Leach may cheat the gallus, but he wonât cheat them blue eyes, let him try ever so! Theyâll be the Lordâs arrows in his skin! You see if they ainât!â
Bainton here gave a signal to Spruce, and they hoisted up the improvised carrying-chair between them, Primmins steadying it behind.
âThere ainât goinâ to be no layinâ low of the Five Sisters!â Josey continued with increasing shrillness and excitement as he was borne out into the moonlit courtyard; âAnd there ainât goinâ to be no devilâs work round the old Manor no more! Welcome âome to Squireâs gel! Welcome âome!â
âShut up, Josey!â said Bainton, though kindly enoughââYouâll soon part with all the breath youâve got in yer body if ye makes a screech owl of yerself like that in the night air! Youâs done enough for once in a way,âkeep easy anâ quiet while we carries ye back to the villageâye weighs a hundred pound âeavier if yeâre noisy,âye do reely now!â
Thus adjured, Josey subsided into silence, and what with the joy he felt at the success of his embassy, the warm still air, and the soothing influence of the moonlight, he soon fell fast asleep, and did not wake till he arrived at his own home in safety. Having deposited him there, and seen to his comfort, Spruce and Bainton left him to his nightâs rest, and held a brief colloquy outside his cottage door.
âIâm awful âfeard goinâ to-morrow marninâ up to the Five Sisters with neâer a tool and neâer a man,âLeach âull be that wild!â said Spruce, his rubicund face paling at the very thoughtââIf I could but âave âad written instructions, like!â
âWhy didnât you ask for âem while you âad the chance?â demanded Bainton testily; âItâs too late now to bother your mind with what ye might haâ done if yeâd had a bit of gumption. And itâs too late for me to be goinâ and speakinâ to Passon Walden. Thereâs nothinâ to be done now till the marninâ!â
âNothinâ to be done till the marninâ,â echoed Spruce with a sigh, catching these words by happy chance; âAll the same, sheâs a fine young lady, and âer orders is to be obeyed. She ainât a bit like what I expected her to be.â
âNor she ainât what I bet she would be,â said Bainton, heedless as to whether his companion heard him or not; âIâve lost âarf a crown to my old âooman, for I sez, sez I, âSheâs bound to be a âigh anâ mighty stuck-up sort oâ miss wot wonât never âave a wurrd for the likes of we,â anâ my old âooman she sez to me: âGo âlong with ye for a great silly gawk as ye are; Iâll bet ye âarf a crown she wonât be!â So I sez âDone,ââanâ done it is. For sheâs just as sweet as clover in the spring, anâ seems as gentle as a lamb,âthough I reckon sheâs got a will of âer own and a mind to do what she likes, when and âow she likes. Iâll âave a fine bit oâ talk with Passon âbout her as soon as iver he gives me the chance.â
âAy, good-night it is,â observed Spruce, placidly taking all these remarks as evening adieux,ââYon moonâs got âigh, and itâs time for bed if so be we rises early. Easy rest ye!â
Bainton nodded. It was all the response necessary. The two then separated, going their different ways to their different homes, Spruce having to get back to the Manor and a possible curtain- lecture from his wife. All the village was soon asleep,âand eleven oâclock rang from the church-tower over closed cottages in which not a nicker of lamp or candle was to be seen. The moonbeams shed a silver rain upon the outlines of the neatly thatched roofs and barnsâillumining with touches of radiance as from heaven, the beautiful âGodâs Houseâ which dominated the whole cluster of humble habitations. Everything was very quiet,âthe little hive of humanity had ceased buzzing; and the intense stillness was only broken by the occasional murmur of a ripple breaking from the river against the pebbly shore.
Up at the Manor, however, the lights were not yet extinguished. Maryllia, on the departure of âAmbassador Joseyâ as she had called him, and his two convoys, had sent for Mrs. Spruce and had gone very closely with her into certain matters connected with Mr. Oliver Leach. It had been difficult work,âfor Mrs. Spruceâs garrulity, combined with her habit of wandering from the immediate point of discussion, and her anxiety to avoid involving herself or her husband in trouble, had created a chaotic confusion in her mind, which somewhat interfered with the lucidity of her statements. Little by little, however, Maryllia extracted a sufficient number of facts from her hesitating and reluctant evidence to gain considerable information on many points respecting the management of her estate, and she began to feel that her return home was providential and had been in a manner pre-ordained. She learned all that Mrs. Spruce could tell her respecting the famous âFive Sistersâ; how they were the grandest and most venerable trees in all the country roundâand how they stood all together on a grassy eminence about a mile and a half from the Manor house and on the Manor lands just beyond the more low-lying woods that spread between. Whereupon Maryllia decided that she would take an early ride over her property the next day,âand gave orders that her favourite mare, âCleopatra,â ready saddled and bridled, should be brought round to the door at five oâclock the next morning. This being settled, and Mrs. Spruce having also humbly stated that all the peacockâs feathers she could find had been summarily cast forth from the Manor through the medium of the parcelsâ post, Maryllia bade her a kindly good-night.
âTo-morrow,â she said, âwe will go all over the house together, and you will explain everything to me. But the first thing to be done is to save those old trees.â
âWell, no one wouldnât âave saved âem if so be as you âadnât come âome, Miss,â declared Mrs. Spruce. âFor Mr. Leach he be a man of his word, and as obsânate as they makes âem, which the Lord Almighty knows men is all made as obsânate as pigsâand heâs been master over the place likeââ
âMoreâs the pity!â said Maryllia; âBut he is master here no longer, Spruce; I am now both mistress and master. Remember that, please!â
Mrs. Spruce curtseyed dutifully and withdrew. The close cross- examination she had undergone respecting Leach had convinced her of two things,âfirstly, that her new mistress, though such a childlike-looking creature, was no fool,âand secondly, that though she was perfectly gentle, kind, and even affectionate in her manner, she evidently had a will of her own, which it seemed likely she would enforce, if necessary, with considerable vigour and imperativeness. And so the worthy old housekeeper decided that on the whole it would be well to be carefulâto mind oneâs Pâs and Qâs as it were,âto pause before rushing pell-mell into a flood of unpremeditated speech, and to pay the strictest possible attention to her regular duties.
âThen mâappen weâll stay on in the old place,â she considered; âBut if we doos those things which we ought not to have done, as they sez in the prayer-book, weâll get the sack in no time, for all that she looks so smilinâ and girlie-like.â
And so profound were her cogitations on this point that she actually forgot to give her husband the sound rating she had prepared for him concerning the part he had taken in bringing Josey Letherbarrow up to the Manor. Returning from the village in some trepidation, that harmless man was allowed to go to bed and sleep in peace, with no more than a reminder shrilled into his ears to be âup with the dawn, as Miss Maryllia would be about early.â
Maryllia herself, meanwhile, quite unconscious that her small personality had made any marked or tremendous effect upon her domestics, retired to rest in happy mood. She was glad to be in her own home, and still more glad to find herself needed there.
âIâve been an absolutely useless creature up till now,â she said, shaking down her hair, after the maid Nancy had disrobed her and left her for the night. âThe fact is, there never was a more utterly idle and nonsensical creature in the world than I am! Iâve done nothing but dress and curl my hair, and polish my face, and dance, and flirt and frivol the time away. Now, if I only am able to save five historical old trees, I shall have done something useful;â something more than half the women I know would ever take the trouble to do. For, of course, I suppose I shall have a row,âor as Aunt Emily would say âwords,ââwith the agent. All the better! I love a fight,âespecially with a man who thinks himself wiser than I am! That is where men are so ridiculous,âthey always think themselves wiser than women, even though some of them canât earn their own living except through a womanâs means. Lots of men will take a womanâs money, and sneer at her while spending it! I know them!â And she nestled into her bed, with a little cosy cuddling movement of her soft white shoulders; ââTake all and give nothing!â is the motto of modern manhood;âI donât admire it,âI donât endorse it; I never shall! The true motto of love and chivalry should be âGive allâtake nothingâ!â
Midnight chimed from the courtyard turret. She listened to the mellow clang with a sense of pleased comfort and security.
âMany people would think of ghosts and all sorts of uncanny things in an old, old house like this at midnight;â she thought; âBut somehow I donât believe there are any ghosts here. At any rate, not unpleasant ones;âonly dear and loving âhomeâ ghosts, who will do me no harm!â
She soon sank into a restful slumber, and the moonlight poured in through the old latticed windows, forming a delicate tracery of silver across the faded rose silken coverlet of the bed, and showing the fair face, half in light, half in shade, that rested against the pillow, with the unbound hair scattered loosely on either side of it, like a white lily between two leaves of gold. And as the hours wore on, and the silence grew more intense, the slow and somewhat rusty pendulum of the clock in the tower could just be heard faintly ticking its way on towards the figures of the dawn. âGive allâtake nothingâGiveâallâtakeânoâthing!â it seemed to say;âthe motto of love and the code of chivalry, according to Maryllia.
X
A thin silver-grey mist floating delicately above the river Rest and dispersing itself in light wreaths across the flowering banks and fields, announced the breaking of the dawn,âand John Walden, who had passed a restless night, threw open his bedroom window widely, with a sense
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