Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 437 pages of information about Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall.

Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 437 pages of information about Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall.

The road we took led us over steep hills and down through dark, shadow-crowded ravines; but up hill, down hill, and on the level the terrible girl before me plunged forward with unabated headlong fury until I thought surely the flesh of horse, man, and woman could endure the strain not one moment longer.  But the horses, the woman, and—­though I say it who should not—­the man were of God’s best handiwork, and the cords of our lives did not snap.  One thought, and only one, held possession of the girl, and the matter of her own life or death had no place in her mind.

When we reached the cross-road where I was to leave her, we halted while I instructed Dorothy concerning the road she should follow from that point to Rutland, and directed her how to proceed when she should arrive at the castle gate.  She eagerly listened for a moment or two, then grew impatient, and told me to hasten in my speech, since there was no time to lose.  Then she fearlessly dashed away alone into the black night; and as I watched her fair form fade into the shadows, the haunting cry came faintly back to me,—­“On, Dolcy, on; on, Dolcy on,” and I was sick at heart.  I was loath to leave her thus in the inky gloom.  The moon had sunk for the night, and the clouds had banked up without a rift against the hidden stars; but I could give her no further help, and my life would pay the forfeit should I accompany her.  She had brought the evil upon herself.  She was the iron, the seed, the cloud, and the rain.  She was fulfilling her destiny.  She was doing that which she must do:  nothing more, nothing less.  She was filling her little niche in the universal moment.  She was a part of the infinite kaleidoscope—­a fate-charged, fate-moved, fragile piece of glass which might be crushed to atoms in the twinkling of an eye, in the sounding of a trump.

After leaving Dorothy I rode across the country and soon overtook the yeoman guard whom I joined unobserved.  Then I marched with them, all too rapidly to suit me, to Rutland.  The little army had travelled with greater speed than I had expected, and I soon began to fear that Dorothy would not reach Rutland Castle in time to enable its inmates to escape.

Within half an hour from the time I joined the yeomen we saw the dim outlines of the castle, and Sir William St. Loe gave the command to hurry forward.  Cecil, Sir William, Sir George, and myself rode in advance of the column.  As we approached the castle by the road leading directly to the gate from the north, I saw for a moment upon the top of the hill west of the castle gate the forms of Dorothy and Dolcy in dim silhouette against the sky.  Then I saw them plunge madly down the hill toward the gate.  I fancied I could hear the girl whispering in frenzied hoarseness,—­“On, Dolcy, on,” and I thought I could catch the panting of the mare.  At the foot of the hill, less than one hundred yards from the gate, poor Dolcy, unable to take another step, dropped to the ground.  Dolcy

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Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.