The Essential Works of William Harrison Ainsworth. William Harrison Ainsworth

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father’s son.”

      “Away with him!” cried Lady Rookwood. “I am out of all patience with this trilling. Follow me to my chamber,” added she to her son, passing towards the door. The concourse of spectators, who had listened to this extraordinary scene in astonishment, made way for her instantly, and she left the room, accompanied by Ranulph. The prisoner was led out by the other door.

      “Botheration!” cried Titus to Mr. Coates, as they followed in the wake, “why did he choose out me? I’ll lose the funeral entirely by his arrangement.”

      “That you will,” replied Palmer. “Shall I be your deputy?”

      “No, no,” returned Coates. “I will have no other than Mr. Tyrconnel. It was Sir Ranulph’s express wish.”

      “That’s the devil of it,” returned Titus; “and I, who was to have been chief mourner, and have made all the preparations, am to be omitted. I wish Sir Ranulph had stayed till to-morrow — what could bring him here, to spoil all? — it’s cursedly provoking!”

      “Cursed provoking!” echoed Jack.

      “But then there’s no help, so I must make the best of it,” returned the good-humored Irishman.

      “Body o’ me,” said Coates, “there’s something in all this that I can’t fathom. As to keeping the prisoner here, that’s all moonshine. But I suppose we shall know the whole drift of it to-morrow.”

      “Ay,” replied Jack, with a meaning smile, “to-morrow!”

      BOOK 2

       THE SEXTON

       Table of Contents

      Duchess. Thou art very plain.

      Bosola. My trade is to flatter the dead — not the living — I am a tomb-maker.

      Webster.

      CHAPTER 1

       THE STORM

       Table of Contents

       Come, list, and hark! the bell doth towle, For some but now departing sowle; And was not that some ominous fowle? The bat, the night-crow, or screech-owle? To these I hear the wild wolf howle, In this dark night that seems to scowle; — All these my blacke-booke shall enrowle, For hark! still hark! the bell doth towle For some but new-departed sowle!

      Haywood: Rape of Lucrece.

      The night was wild and stormy. The day had been sultry, with a lurid, metallic-looking sky, hanging like a vast galvanic plate over the face of nature. As evening drew on, everything betokened the coming tempest. Unerring indications of its approach were noted by the weatherwise at the hall. The swallow was seen to skim the surface of the pool so closely that he ruffled its placid mirror as he passed; and then, sharply darting round and round, with twittering scream, he winged his rapid flight to his clay-built home, beneath the barn eaves. The kine that had herded to the margin of the water, and sought, by splashing, to relieve themselves from the keen persecution of their myriad insect tormentors, wended stallwards, undriven, and deeply lowing. The deer, that at twilight had trooped thither also for refreshment, suddenly, “with expanded nostrils, snuffed the air,” and bounded off to their coverts, amidst the sheltering fernbrake. The rooks “obstreperous of wing, in crowds combined,” cawed in a way that, as plainly as words could have done, bespoke their apprehension; and were seen, some hovering and beating the air with flapping pinion, others shooting upwards in mid space, as if to reconnoitre the weather; while others, again, were croaking to their mates, in loud discordant tone, from the highest branches of the lime-trees; all, seemingly, as anxious and as busy as mariners before a gale of wind. At sunset, the hazy vapors, which had obscured the horizon throughout the day, rose up in spiral volumes, like smoke from a burning forest, and, becoming gradually condensed, assumed the form of huge, billowy masses, which, reflecting the sun’s light, changed, as the sinking orb declined, from purple to flame-color, and thence to ashy, angry gray. Night rushed onwards, like a sable steed. There was a dead calm. The stillness was undisturbed, save by an intermittent, sighing wind, which, hollow as a murmur from the grave, died as it rose. At once the gray clouds turned to an inky blackness. A single, sharp, intensely vivid flash, shot from the bosom of the rack, sheer downwards, and struck the earth with a report like that of a piece of ordnance. In ten minutes it was dunnest night, and a rattling thunder-storm.

      The progress of the storm was watched with infinite apprehension by the crowd of tenantry assembled in the great hall; and loud and frequent were the ejaculations uttered, as each succeeding peal burst over their heads. There was, however, one amongst the assemblage who seemed to enjoy the uproar. A kindred excitement appeared to blaze in his glances, as he looked upon the storm without. This was Peter Bradley. He stood close by the window, and shaded not his eyes, even before the fiercest flashes. A grin of unnatural exhilaration played upon his features, and he seemed to exult in, and to court, the tempestuous horrors, which affected the most hardy amongst his companions with consternation, and made all shrink, trembling, into the recesses of the room. Peter’s conduct was not unobserved, nor his reputation for unholy dealing forgotten. To some he was almost as much an object of dread as the storm itself.

      “Didst ever see the like o’ that?” said Farmer Burtenshaw — one of the guests, whose round, honest face good wine had recently empurpled, but fear had now mottled white — addressing a neighbor. “Didst ever hear of any man that were a Christian laughing in the very face o’ a thunder-storm, with the lightnin’ fit to put out his eyes, and the rattle above ready to break the drums o’ his ears? I always thought Peter Bradley was not exactly what he ought to be, and now I am sure on it.”

      “For my part, I think, Neighbor Burtenshaw,” returned the other, “that this great burst of weather’s all of his raising, for in all my born days I never see’d such a hurly-burly, and hope never to see the like of it again. I’ve heard my grandfather tell of folk as could command wind and rain; and, mayhap, Peter may have the power — we all know he can do more nor any other man.”

      “We know, at all events,” replied Burtenshaw, “that he lives like no other man; that he spends night after night by himself in that dreary churchyard; that he keeps no living thing, except an old terrier dog, in his crazy cottage; and that he never asks a body into his house from one year’s end to another. I’ve never crossed his threshold these twenty years. But,” continued he mysteriously, “I happened to pass the house one dark, dismal night, and there what dost think I see’d through the window?”

      “What — what didst see?”

      “Peter Bradley sitting with a great book open on his knees; it were a Bible, I think, and he crying like a child.”

      “Art sure o’ that?”

      “The tears were falling fast upon the leaves,” returned Burtenshaw; “but when I knocked at the door, he hastily shut up the book, and ordered me to be gone, in a surly tone, as if he were ashamed of being caught in the fact.”

      “I thought no tear had ever dropped from his eye,” said the other. “Why, he laughed when his daughter Susan went off at the hall; and, when she died, folks said he received hush-money

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