Wych Hazel eBook

Anna Bartlett Warner
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 557 pages of information about Wych Hazel.

Wych Hazel eBook

Anna Bartlett Warner
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 557 pages of information about Wych Hazel.

’For a minute.  She came to me to know if it was true; but she did not stay after that.’

No remark from the opposite party.

‘I’m very sorry about it,’ continued the old gentleman.  ’I’m afraid—­I was afraid, it might make you trouble, Dane.  Prudentia is much to blame.’

Dane answered nothing.  He wrung his late guardian’s hand by way of acknowledging his sympathy, and left the study.

‘I had almost caught my bird!’ was his thought, pretty bitterly realized,—­’and this woman has broken my snares.  It isn’t the first time!’

He saw, he thought he saw, the whole character and extent of the mischief that had been done.  He knew Wych Hazel; he could guess at the bound of revulsion her spirit would make at several points in the narrative that had been told her.  He knew Prudentia; he could fancy that the details lost nothing in the giving.

But the steadiness, not of feeling, but of nerves and judgment, which was characteristic of him, kept his eyesight clear even now.  He did not fall into Wych Hazel’s confusion of thoughts and notions; nor did his hunter’s instincts fail him.  His game was removed to a distance; that he saw; it might be a long distance,—­and how much patient skill might be called for before it would be within his grasp again it was impossible to guess.  There were odds of another hunter catching up the coveted quarry; other snares might be set, of a less legitimate nature; other weapons called into play than his own.  There are some natures who do not know how to fail, and who never do fail in what they set themselves to accomplish.  In spite of disadvantages, Rollo had very much in his favour; and this peculiar constitution of mind, among other things.

He would go up to Chickaree that same day.  Before presenting himself there, he and the bay horse travelled, I am afraid to say how many miles in two hours.  But nerves and senses were in their usual condition of excellent soundness, and his temper in its usual poise, when he turned in at the gate of Chickaree, and mounted the hill.

Before he quite reached the house, however, Mr. Rollo, being quick of eye, caught a signal from among the trees down towards the garden:  a woman’s hand raised in the fashion of a Sunday school scholar asking leave to speak.  Drawing bridle, to make sure that he saw right, or to find what this strange sign might mean, he presently saw little Phoebe of the mill, who, leaving her basket of muslins on the grass, now came running towards him.  Phoebe’s regard for Mr. Rollo, it may be said, was second only to her devotion to her mistress.

‘I hope I’m not taking too much of a liberty, sir,’ she began, all out of breath with eagerness and running, ’but I said to myself maybe Mr. Rollo would know what to do.  For I’m sure Miss Hazel must be very sick,—­and nobody takes a bit of notice.’

The inner pang with which this advice was received did not at all appear.  Rider and horse were motionless, and the answer was a grave—­

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Project Gutenberg
Wych Hazel from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.