The Magician eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 273 pages of information about The Magician.

The Magician eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 273 pages of information about The Magician.
of winter; they were old and bowed before the storm.  One of them attracted his attention.  It had been struck by lightning and was riven asunder, leafless; but the maimed branches were curiously set on the trunk so that they gave it the appearance of a human being writhing in the torture of infernal agony.  The wind whistled strangely.  Arthur’s heart sank as he walked on.  He had never seen a country so desolate.

He came to the park gates at last and stood for some time in front of them.  At the end of a long avenue, among the trees, he could see part of a splendid house.  He walked along the wooden palisade that surrounded the park.  Suddenly he came to a spot where a board had been broken down.  He looked up and down the road.  No one was in sight.  He climbed up the low, steep bank, wrenched down a piece more of the fence, and slipped in.

He found himself in a dense wood.  There was no sign of a path, and he advanced cautiously.  The bracken was so thick and high that it easily concealed him.  Dead owners had plainly spent much care upon the place, for here alone in the neighbourhood were trees in abundance; but of late it had been utterly neglected.  It had run so wild that there were no traces now of its early formal arrangement; and it was so hard to make one’s way, the vegetation was so thick, that it might almost have been some remnant of primeval forest.  But at last he came to a grassy path and walked along it slowly.  He stopped on a sudden, for he heard a sound.  But it was only a pheasant that flew heavily through the low trees.  He wondered what he should do if he came face to face with Oliver.  The innkeeper had assured him that the squire seldom came out, but spent his days locked in the great attics at the top of the house.  Smoke came from the chimneys of them, even in the hottest days of summer, and weird tales were told of the devilries there committed.

Arthur went on, hoping in the end to catch sight of Margaret, but he saw no one.  In that grey, chilly day the woods, notwithstanding their greenery, were desolate and sad.  A sombre mystery seemed to hang over them.  At last he came to a stone bench at a cross-way among the trees, and, since it was the only resting-place he had seen, it struck him that Margaret might come there to sit down.  He hid himself in the bracken.  He had forgotten his watch and did not know how the time passed; he seemed to be there for hours.

But at length his heart gave a great beat against his ribs, for all at once, so silently that he had not heard her approach, Margaret came into view.  She sat on the stone bench.  For a moment he dared not move in case the sound frightened her.  He could not tell how to make his presence known.  But it was necessary to do something to attract her attention, and he could only hope that she would not cry out.

‘Margaret,’ he called softly.

She did not move, and he repeated her name more loudly.  But still she made no sign that she had heard.  He came forward and stood in front of her.

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Project Gutenberg
The Magician from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.