Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 431 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 75 pages of information about Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 431.

Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 431 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 75 pages of information about Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 431.

’Wyatt regarded me with a deadly scowl as he answered:  ’Ay, ay, you’re a brave cock, Master Warneford, upon your own dunghill.  It may be my turn some day.  Here, doctor, a word with you outside.’  They both left the room, and I rang the bell, discharged the score, and was just going when Lee returned.  He was still pale and shaky, though considerably recovered from the panic-terror excited by the sudden entrance of Wyatt.

‘Thank Heaven, he’s gone!’ said the doctor; ’and less sour and suspicious than I feared him to be.  But tell me, sir, do you intend walking from here to Hythe?’

‘I so purpose.  Why do you ask?’

’Because the young girl you saw in the bar went off ten minutes ago by the same road.  She was too late for a farmer’s cart which she expected to return by.  Wyatt, too, is off in the same direction.’

‘She will have company then.’

’Evil company, I fear.  Her father and he have lately quarrelled; and her, I know, he bears a grudge against, for refusing, as the talk goes, to have anything to say to him.’

’Very well; don’t alarm yourself.  I shall soon overtake them, and you may depend the big drunken bully shall neither insult nor molest her.  Good-night.’

It was a lonely walk for a girl to take on a winter evening, although the weather was brilliantly light and clear, and it was not yet much past seven o’clock.  Except, perchance, a deer-keeper, or a deer-stealer, it was not likely she would meet a human being for two or three miles together, and farm and other houses near the track were very sparsely scattered here and there.  I walked swiftly on, and soon came within sight of Wyatt; but so eagerly was his attention directed ahead, that he did not observe me till we were close abreast of each other.

‘You here!’ he exclaimed, fairly gnashing his teeth with rage.  ’I only wish’—­

’That you had one or two friends within hail, eh?  Well, it’s better for your own health that you have not, depend upon it.  I have four barrels with me, and each of them, as you well know, carries a life, one of which should be yours, as sure as that black head is on your shoulders.’

He answered only by a snarl and a malediction, and we proceeded on pretty nearly together.  He appeared to be much soberer than before:  perhaps the keen air had cooled him somewhat, or he might have been shamming it a little at the inn to hoodwink the doctor.  Five or six minutes brought us to a sharp turn of the road, where we caught sight of the young woman, who was not more than thirty or forty yards ahead.  Presently, the sound of footsteps appeared to strike her ear, for she looked quickly round, and an expression of alarm escaped her.  I was in the shadow of the road, so that, in the first instance, she saw only Wyatt.  Another moment, and her terrified glance rested upon me.

‘Lieutenant Warneford!’ she exclaimed.

’Ay, my good girl, that is my name.  You appear frightened—­not at me, I hope?’

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Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 431 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.