Rattlin the Reefer Part 43
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"Ah! she was always imperious, always obstinate. There must have been some exciting conversation between you, sir (turning to me), and the lady; did you say anything to vex or grieve her?"
"On the contrary; she was expressing the most unbounded hope and happiness when she died."
"And the name of G.o.d was not on her lips, the prayer for pardon not in her heart, when she was s.n.a.t.c.hed away."
I shook my head. "Well," said he, "it is a solemn end, and she was a wilful lady. Do you know, Miss Tremayne, if she has any relations living?--they should be sent for."
"I know of none. A person of distinction, whose name I am not at liberty to mention, sometimes visited her. We had better send for her solicitor."
Some other conversation took place, which I hardly noticed. The body was adjusted on the couch, we left the room, and the door was locked.
As I walked quietly, almost stealthily, home, I felt stunned. Health and mortality, death and life, seemed so fearfully jumbled together, that I almost doubted whether I was not traversing a city of spirits.
My Achates stared at me when I described to him the late occurrences.
"So you have at length discovered him?" said he.
"I have--a voice almost from the grave has imparted to me all that I wished to know--and something more. I have sprung from a beautiful race--but we must not speak ill of kith and kin, must we, Pigtop?"
"For certain not. And, so your father actually did send that old lord to look after you at your return from the West Indies. Well, that shows some affection for you, at all events."
"The fruits of which affection Daunton is, no doubt, now reaping."
"Well, let us go and cut his throat, or rather, turn him over to the hangman."
"No, Pigtop; I have promised his mother that I will not attempt his life."
"But I have not."
"Humph! let us to roost. To-morrow, at break of day, we will be off for Rathelin Hall. See that our arms are in order. And now to what rest nature and good consciences will afford us."
CHAPTER SIXTY NINE.
MR. PIGTOP BELIEVETH IN GHOSTS, AND HATH SOME TRUST IN WITCHES, BUT NONE AT ALL IN LAWYERS--A CONSULTATION AFTER SUPPER, AND, AFTER SUPPER, ACTION.
Early next morning, Mr Pigtop and myself were seated in a post-chaise, making the best of our way towards the western extremity of England.
When we had arrived at Exeter, where we found it necessary to sleep, in order to gain some little restoration from the fatigues of our incessant travelling, we made up our minds to hire three horses and a groom, and, having very accurately ascertained the exact site of Rathelin Hall, which was situated a few miles to the north-eastward of Barnstaple, we arrived there towards the close of the day, and put up at a very decent inn in an adjoining village.
The old and large house was distinctly visible, notwithstanding the well-wooded park in which it was situated, from the windows of our inn.
A conference with our host fully realised our worst fears. He informed us that Sir Reginald was not expected to live many days; that his whole deportment was very edifying; and, moreover, that his dying hours were solaced and sweetened by the presence and the a.s.siduities of his only and long-disowned, but now acknowledged, son Ralph. We, moreover, learned that this Ralph came attended by a London attorney; and that they, with the priest Thomas, in the intervals between rest, refection, and prayer, were actively employed in settling his sublunary affairs, very much to the dissatisfaction of a Mr Seabright, the family solicitor, and land-steward of the estate.
"Where does Mr Seabright live?" was my question, instantly.
"Why, here, sir, to be sure, in our town of Antwick; and mortally in dudgeon he has taken all this."
"Undoubtedly, and with justice," was my reply. "So faithful a servant, who has for so many years had the sole management of the Rathelin affairs, should not be cast off so slightly. Give us as good a supper, landlord, as your skill and Antwick can produce, and let us have covers for three. Send your porter down to Mr Seabright--but I had better write a note." So I sent to him a polite invitation to sup with us, telling him that two strangers wished to see him on important business.
To all these proceedings Pigtop demurred. He was for the summary process of going before a magistrate next morning, and taking out a warrant to apprehend Joshua Daunton on the capital charge for which he was pursued in London, and thus, at one blow, wind up the affair.
But I held my promise to Mrs Causand to be sacred, and determined to give him, my fraternal enemy, one chance of escaping. Pigtop's repugnance, however, to the employment of a lawyer could not be overcome; so, not being able to obtain his consent, I determined to try and do without it, which my friend averred to be impossible.
At nine o'clock precisely, as the smoking dishes appeared, so did the lawyer. A sudden emotion was perceptible on his iron-bound visage when his eyes first fell upon me, of the nature of which I could form no idea. Mr Pigtop bowed to him very stiffly; and it was some time before the genuine cordiality of my manner could put Mr Seabright at his ease.
While we were at table, I begged to decline giving him our names, as I was fearful that the intelligence might travel to the Hall, and thus give some scope for further machinations on the part of Joshua. But, as is too often the case, we were prudent only by halves.
The groom that we had hired, not being enjoined to secrecy, had unhesitatingly told everyone belonging to the establishment our appellations. The landlord and his household were much struck by the similarity of the name by which I still went, Rattlin, and that of Rathelin; and thus, whilst I was playing the cautious before Mr Seabright, the news had already reached the Hall, and those most concerned to know it, that two gentlemen, a Mr Rattlin and a Mr Pigtop, with their groom, had put up at the Three Bells in the village, and had sent for the lawyer.
When, after supper, we had carefully secured the privacy of our apartment, amidst many nudges and objurgations from my former s.h.i.+pmate, I proceeded to relate to the astonished solicitor who I was, and what were my motives for appearing at that juncture in the neighbourhood. I also told him of the personation of myself that I understood was then going on at the Hall, at the same time totally suppressing every other guilty circ.u.mstance of Daunton's life.
When I had finished my recital, I produced my doc.u.ments; and, notwithstanding that he was almost breathless with wonder, he confessed that he believed implicitly all my a.s.sertions, and would a.s.sist me to recover my rights, and disabuse my father, to the utmost of his abilities.
"You have lost much valuable time," said he. "This impostor has now been domesticated some days with Sir Reginald. I think, with you, that he has no ulterior views upon the t.i.tle and the estates. His object is present plunder, and the inducing your father, through the agency of that scoundrel London lawyer, to make him sign such doc.u.ments that everything that can be willed away will be made over to him. We must, to-morrow, proceed in a body to the Hall, and take the villains by surprise. I will now return home and prepare some necessary doc.u.ments.
As this is a criminal matter, I will also take care to have the attendance of an upright and clear-seeing magistrate, who will proceed with us--not certainly later than ten o'clock to morrow."
He then took his leave, with an air of much importance, and more alacrity than I could have expected from a man of his years.
When Pigtop and myself were left alone, neither the first nor the second nor'-wester of brandy-and-water could arouse him from his sullen mood.
He told me frankly, and in his own sea-slang, that he could not disintegrate the idea of a lawyer from that of the devil, and that he was a.s.sured that neither I nor my cause would prosper if I permitted the interference of a land-shark. I was even obliged to a.s.sume a little the authority of a master, in order to subdue his murmurings: to convince his judgment I did not try--in which forbearance I displayed much wisdom. We each retired to our respective room, with less of cordiality than we had ever displayed since our unexpected reunion.
I had no sooner got to bed than I determined, by a violent effort, to sleep. I had always a ready soporific at hand. It was a repeating and re-repeating of a pious little ode by a late fas.h.i.+onable poet. It seldom failed to produce somnolency at about the twelfth or thirteenth repet.i.tion. I would recommend a similar prescription to the sleepless; and I can a.s.sure them that there is much verse lately printed, and by people who plume themselves no little upon it, that need not be gone over more than twice at furthest; excepting the person may have Saint Vitus dance, and then a third time may be necessary. I would specify some of these works, were it at all necessary; but the afflicted have only to ask, at random, for the last published volume of poems, or to take up an annual, either old or new, and they may be _dosed_ without the perpetration of a pun.
Three times had I slept by the means of my ode, and three times had I awaked by some horrible dream, that fled my memory with my slumbers. I could draw no omen from it, for my mind could not bring it out sufficiently distinct to fix a single idea upon it. However, as I found my sleep so much more miserable than my watchfulness, I got up, and, putting on a portion of my clothes, began to promenade my room with a slow step and a very anxious mind.
I had made but few turns, when my door was abruptly thrust open, and Pigtop stalked in, fully dressed.
"I can't sleep, Rattlin," said he, "and tarnation glad am I to see that you can't caulk either. A dutiful son you would be, to be snoozing here, and very likely, at this very moment, the rascal's knife is hacking at your father's weasand. It is not yet twelve o'clock; and I saw from my window, from whence I can see the Hall plainly, a strange dancing of light about the windows, and you may take an old sailor's word that something uncommon's in the wind. Let us go and reconnoitre."
"With all my heart; any action is better than this wretched inactivity of suspense. I will complete my dress, and you, in the meantime, look to the pistols."
We were soon ready, and sallied forth unperceived from the inn. We had no purpose, no ultimate views; yet both Pigtop and myself seemed fully to understand that we should be compelled into some desperate adventure.
I was going armed, and by night, like an a.s.sa.s.sin, to seek the presence, or, at least, to watch over the safety of a father I had never seen, never loved, and never respected.
The s.p.a.ce that separated the abode of my father from the inn was soon pa.s.sed; and, a little after midnight, I stood within the gloomy and park-like enclosure that circ.u.mscribed the front of the large old mansion. The lodge was a ruin, the gates had long been thrown down, and we stumbled over some of their remnants, imbedded in the soil, and matted to it with long and tangled gra.s.s. I observed that there was a scaffolding over the front of the lodge; but whether it were for the purpose of repairing or taking down, I could not then discover.
As my companion and myself advanced to the front of the building, we also observed that, lofty as were its walls, it was scaffolded to the very attics, and some part of the roof of the right wing was already removed. Altogether, a more comfortless, a more dispiriting view could hardly have been presented; and its disconsolateness was much increased by the dim and fitful light that a young moon gave at intervals, upon gables, cas.e.m.e.nts, and clumps of funereal yews.
"And this," as we stood before the portals, said I to Pigtop, "is my inheritance--mine. Is it not a princely residence?"
"It looms like a county jail, that's being turned into a private madhouse. If so be as how witches weren't against the law of the land, this seems the very place for them. Do you believe in ghosts?"
"Verily, yes, and--no."
"Because I think that I see the ghosts of a hea.r.s.e and four horses among those tall trees at that corner."
"Then, Pig, we must be on the alert--for I see it, too; but the vision has a.s.sumed the every-day deception of a post-chaise and four."
"Jeer as you will, it is a hea.r.s.e: somebody's just losing the number of his mess. It will take away a corpse to-night, depend upon it. That a post-chaise! Pooh! I can see the black plumes waving upon the horses'
Rattlin the Reefer Part 43
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Rattlin the Reefer Part 43 summary
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