The House by the Church-Yard eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 822 pages of information about The House by the Church-Yard.

The House by the Church-Yard eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 822 pages of information about The House by the Church-Yard.

’Biddy, now mind—­d’ye see—­the lady that came to me in the end of July—­do you remember?—­in the black satin—­you know?—­she’ll be here to-day, and we’re going down together in her coach to Mrs. Nutter’s; but that does not signify.  As soon as she comes, bring her in here, into this room—­d’ye mind?—­and go across that instant minute—­d’ye see now?—­straight to Dr. Toole, and ask him to send me the peppermint drops he promised me.’

Then she cross-questioned Biddy, to ascertain that she perfectly understood and clearly remembered; and, finally, she promised her half-a-crown if she peformed this very simple commission to her mistress’s satisfaction and held her tongue religiously on the subject.  She had apprised Toole the evening before, and now poor ’Mrs. Mack’s sufferings, she hoped, were about to be brought to a happy termination by the doctor’s ingenuity.  She was, however, very nervous indeed, as the crisis approached; for such a beast as Mary Matchwell at bay was a spectacle to excite a little tremor even in a person of more nerve than fat Mrs. Macnamara.

And what could Mary Matchwell want of a conjuring conference, of all persons in the world, with poor little Mrs. Nutter?  Mrs. Mack had done in this respect simply as she was bid.  She had indeed no difficulty to persuade Mrs. Nutter to grant the interview.  That harmless little giggling creature could not resist the mere mention of a fortune-teller.  Only for Nutter, who set his face against this sort of sham witchcraft, she would certainly have asked him to treat her with a glimpse into futurity at that famous-sibyl’s house; and now that she had an opportunity of having the enchantress tete-a-tete in her own snug parlour at the Mills, she was in a delightful fuss of mystery and delight.

Mrs. Mack, indeed, from her own sad experience, felt a misgiving and a pang in introducing the formidable prophetess.  But what could she do?  She dared not refuse; all she could risk was an anxious hint to poor little Mrs. Nutter, ’not to be telling her anything, good, bad, or indifferent, but just to ask her what questions she liked, and no more.’  Indeed, poor Mrs. Mack was low and feverish about this assignation, and would have been more so but for the hope that her Polonius, behind the arras, would bring the woman of Endor to her knees.

All on a sudden she heard the rumble and jingle of a hackney coach, and the clang of the horses’ hoofs pulled up close under her window; her heart bounded and fluttered up to her mouth, and then dropped down like a lump of lead, and she heard a well-known voice talk a few sentences to the coachman, and then in the hall, as she supposed, to Biddy; and so she came into the room, dressed as usual in black, tall, thin, and erect, with a black hood shading her pale face and the mist and chill of night seemed to enter along with her.

It was a great relief to poor Mrs. Mack, that she actually saw Biddy at that moment run across the street toward Toole’s hall-door, and she quickly averted her conscious glance from the light-heeled handmaid.

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The House by the Church-Yard from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.