The Village Notary Part 74
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"Is it you, Janosh?" said he, addressing the new comer. "What does this dress mean?"
"It's strange, isn't it? We are naked when we are born, and naked do we go to the grave, or at best they give us a gatya to sleep in. A soldier was a peasant at one time, and to a peasant's estate he returns; that's how the world goes. After all, my present dress is none of the worst, only I felt queer in it at first, accustomed as I am, you know, to be b.u.t.toned up in a tight hussar jacket. For some days I fancied I was not dressed at all!"
"But where did you come from, and what has brought you all this way from home?"
The old soldier, who had some secret misgivings about the honesty of his errand, felt uncomfortable at this question.
"Why," said he, scratching his head, "I wanted to call on you,--that is to say, I wanted to find you. I've some important matters to talk to you about. But don't be frightened, man!" added he, on seeing Viola's astonishment; "I have indeed promised to find you, but I have not promised to tell them where you are. I'll have my palaver with you, that's all, and you may afterwards do as you please. As for the wors.h.i.+pful magistrates, they shall never get any thing out of me; no!
not even if they'd skin me alive! I'm not the man to blow upon a deserter! Bless you! I never did that sort of a thing!"
Viola's curiosity was heightened by the words and the manner of Janosh; and his desire for an account of the sudden and mysterious appearance of the latter was at length gratified by a circ.u.mstantial statement of all the events which had taken place at Dustbury and Tissaret, since the a.s.sa.s.sination of Mr. Catspaw. The impression which this news produced upon Viola was fearful.
When Janosh told him of Tengelyi's situation, he cast a despairing look to heaven, and cried:--
"I am a cursed being! I am born to destroy all who come near me, no matter whether they are my friends or my foes!"
And covering his eyes with his hands, he gave himself up to a transport of grief.
His distress moved the old hussar, who endeavoured to comfort him in his own rough manner.
"Don't you think," said Janosh, "that Mr. Tengelyi is very badly off!
Nonsense, man! he isn't even in gaol."
"But where is he?"
"Why he is not exactly in gaol; but he's in a room of his own in the prison. He has plenty to eat and to drink, for it's I who wait upon him; and you might have known that I am not a man who would give Master Akosh's father-in-law cause to complain. He's all right and comfortable, and there's no reason why he should not walk away, if they had not got that accursed criminal process (for that's the name they give it, I believe,) against him. But there's the rub! Unless his innocence is proved, they'll sentence him--Heaven knows to what! And you see----"
"Did I not wish to serve him?" cried Viola, in a violent burst of grief.
"I'm in grat.i.tude bound to serve him! He gave shelter to my wife and children. I would have given my life to make him happy. I killed the attorney because I thought to do him good, and what has come of all my grat.i.tude?"
"Well?"
"Why, this has come of it! He's the honestest man on the face of the earth, and they accuse him of _my_ crime! and it's I who have got him into prison,--oh! and if you had not come and told me all, they would execute him in my place!"
"Viola! my boy," said the hussar, "you're wrong. The case is not half so bad as you make it out, I a.s.sure you."
"Oh, Janos.h.!.+ why, when I was sentenced at Tissaret, did you come to my a.s.sistance? Why did you save my life? You see what I have come to! I'm ready to bless the day of my death. When a mad dog feels the distemper, he will run away from the house of his master, in order not to harm his benefactor! That's what a mad dog does,--but I, I am worse than a dog, for I am dangerous to those whom I love best!"
Janosh, who was deeply moved by Viola's remorse, endeavoured to comfort him, by protesting he was sure there must be some means of extricating the notary from his present dangerous position.
His words, rude and awkward as they were, had their effect upon Viola.
He became more composed, and said--
"As for the notary, he is safe. It will take us three days to go to Dustbury. The papers which I took from the attorney are in my hands; they are covered with blood, and when I tell them how the thing was brought about, they cannot possibly suspect Tengelyi."
The old hussar shook his head.
"I don't think," said he, "you can do it in that way. You're not in a fit state to take a resolution. You are in despair, and what you intend to do ought to be well considered. Nothing is more easy than to go to Dustbury. 'Here I am! I'm Viola! I've killed that rascal, Catspaw!' Why it's mere child's-play to say the words. But the worst is behind. When they've once got you into gaol, I don't see how you can get out of it."
"I don't care!"
"But you ought to care! Why, man! it's the very first thing you ought to think of! They have indeed promised not to take your life, and even the sheriff has pledged his word for your safety! But who can tell? I wouldn't advise you to rely on the promises of the gentry, and it's far more prudent to manage the business otherwise."
"Have you any idea how it can be done?" said Viola, sullenly.
"Of course I have! Give me the papers! I'll take them to Dustbury, and tell the gentlemen that I have spoken to you, that you gave me the papers, and that you made no denial of your having murdered the attorney."
"They'll never believe you!"
"If they don't, I'll call in another witness--Gatzi the Vagabond, who is a good fellow. He's come along with me, and he's now at your neighbour's, the Gulyash. Two honest witnesses can prove any thing; but as Gatzi is not, perhaps, quite honest, because he's in the habit of stealing now and then, we'll have the Gulyash as a third witness. While we are telling our story at Dustbury, you and your wife and children leave this place, and when they come to arrest you they'll find an empty house. That's _my_ plan!"
"I have no children!" said Viola, with a deep sigh; "our last--our little Pishta--was buried two months ago!"
"Pishta!" cried Janosh; "my little Pishta! Why, that's a dreadful misfortune!"
"The two little ones are dead! I am childless! My poor Susi is not likely to survive her sweet children long. She is sinking fast; poor woman, she won't see the next snow!"
The two men sat in silence. Viola was lost in gloomy thought, and old Janosh's eyes were full of tears. At length he said,--
"Truly, G.o.d alone knows why fate deals harshly with some people! They tell me we're all going to the same place in the end, and that G.o.d, who is a great general, commands us to march straight through this world into another. But I must say, the men of the rear-guard have the worst of it. The advanced guard have it all to themselves--grub, and glory, and all; and those that remain behind are in for short commons and kicks. I've known that sort of thing, my boy! When an army retreats, the best men are ordered to the rear; and in the wars I've been dealt with as you are on this earth. 'Devil take the hindmost!' is a true proverb.
Bless me! you can't fancy what hard blows we got, and how we were starved! but, after all, it was then I learnt that a man ought never to despair. For when you've come to the camp, a good general is sure to praise and reward the last man of the regiment; and I'm sure our Father in Heaven will do the same when you march into quarters. And besides, who knows but the tide will turn? Susi is left you, and that's a great blessing. Why shouldn't she have half a dozen children? You won't have another Pishta, I'm afraid; for there is not another such a child on the earth, nor will there ever be; but you'll have plenty of children.
And, I say, no one knows what a deal of good luck such a child may bring you; and all I say to you is, you're a fool if you put your neck into the keeping of the Dustbury gentry. Bless you, man, it's the worst you can do! and there's time enough for the worst, I should hope!"
Viola listened to the old hussar's advice, without showing his dissent either by words or gestures; but when Janosh ceased speaking, and looked at him, waiting for a reply, he shook his head sadly, hopelessly, and said,--
"You would not advise me as you do if you could but know what I have suffered. You warn me not to surrender to my judges and you counsel me to fly from punishment. But do you really think, my poor Janosh, that my present and past sufferings are not a hundred times more painful than any punishment which they can award to me? You say they will sentence me to death. It's no more than what I deserve. And what is even the most painful death, compared to the unceasing fear which has weighed upon my heart ever since I came to this place? I am eighty miles from home; but what, after all, are eighty miles? _You_ have found me, and others may!"
"There you are out! It's not every man has been in the wars, and----"
"You found me by accident! Oh, I tell you, I've played the coward! I've crouched among the ferns and the brushwood, when I saw a stranger approaching my house! When my master asked me about my former pursuits, I felt the hot blood rush into my face, and I trembled for all the world as if I stood before my Judge. No, Janos.h.!.+ my life is a h.e.l.l! it's not the life of a human being, and the sooner I've got rid of it the better for me, for Susi, for all!"
"They won't hang you!" said Janosh. "The sheriff has come to quarrel with his wife, and he has been an altered man ever since. He has promised to spare your life, and I'm sure he'll stick to his word, that is to say, if he _can_; for, after all, who knows but the other gentleman may get the better of him? and it's always my opinion one ought never----"
"Stop!" cried Viola. "I'm sure you mean well; but I've made up my mind.
Believe me, ever since my children died I've often thought whether to surrender is not the best thing I can do. Even if you had not come and told me of the notary's danger, I think I should have given myself up to the police, to rid myself of the torments which now prey upon my mind.
A few days before my poor Pishta died, the child was so thin and worn out you would not have known him if you had seen him at the time.
Nothing was left of him but his sweet soft voice; methinks I hear it now; and he----What were we saying?" continued Viola, wiping his eyes; "to think of him makes me forget all and everything. What was it, Janosh?"
"You spoke of Pishta's death. Don't go on, pray!"
"I must! I must tell you, that shortly before he died, and, indeed, all the time he was ill, he entreated me not to go on being a robber: 'Won't you, father, dear! you won't be a robber any more?' were the last words I ever heard him say. Now, tell me, is it in my power to obey my dying child's request if I remain here? Let the meanest thief come to this house who has seen me in former times; is he not my master, because he has my secret? Can he not force me to join him in any crime he may choose to perpetrate? I'm lost! My very honesty depends upon an accident; and chance alone can protect me from falling back into my old ways."
Janosh sighed; for he felt the truth of Viola's remarks.
"There's blood on my hands, and I must die! It's but common justice!
I've thought the matter over, and I see no other way to get out of it.
And, after all, there is neither peace nor comfort in this world after such a deed! When they have p.r.o.nounced my sentence, my conscience will cease from accusing me. I have not, indeed, ever had the _intention_ of killing any body! Accident has made me what I am--a murderer! and fate has decreed that I am to suffer for my crime. What man can prevail against his destiny?"
"This is all very well; but what's to become of Susi, I'd like to know?"
The Village Notary Part 74
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The Village Notary Part 74 summary
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