The Story of Charles Strange - LightNovelsOnl.com
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The lady shook her head impatiently, and decided to walk. "Can you come with me to carry my bag and to show me the way?" she asked of the surly boy.
The surly boy, willing or unwilling, had to acquiesce, and they set off to walk. Upon emerging from the station, he came to a standstill.
"Now, which way d'you mean to go?" began he, facing round upon his companion. "There's the road way, and it's plaguy long; two mile, good; and there's the field way, and it's a sight nearer."
"Is it as good as the road?"
"It's gooder--barring the bull. He runs at everybody. And he tosses 'em, if he can catch 'em."
Not caring to encounter so objectionable an animal, the lady chose the road; and the boy strode on before her, bag in hand. It was downhill all the way. In due time they reached Marshdale House, which lay in a hollow. It was a low, straggling, irregular structure, built of dark red brick, with wings and gable ends, and must originally have looked more like a comfortable farm-house than a n.o.bleman's seat. But it had been added to at various periods, without any regard to outward appearance or internal regularity. It was exceedingly retired, and a very large garden surrounded the house, encompa.s.sed by high walls and dense trees.
The walls were separated by a pair of handsome iron gates, and a small doorway stood beside them. A short, straight avenue, overhung by trees, led to the front entrance of the house. The surly boy, turning himself and his bag round, pushed backwards against the small door, sent it flying, and branched off into a side-path.
"Is not that the front-door?" said the lady, trying to arrest him.
"'Tain't no manner of use going to it," replied the imperturbable boy, marching on. "The old gentleman and lady gets out o' the way, and the maids in the kitchen be deaf, I think. Last time I came up here with a parcel, I rung at it till I was tired, and n.o.body heard."
He went up to a side-door, flung it open, and put down the bag. A neat-looking young woman, with her sleeves turned up, came forward, and stared in silence.
"Is Lord Level within?" inquired the lady.
"My lord's ill in bed," replied the servant; "he cannot be seen or spoken to. What do you want with him, please?"
She seemed a good-tempered, ignorant sort of girl, but nothing more.
At that moment someone called to her from an inner room, and she turned away.
"Are there not any upper servants in the house, do you know?" inquired the lady of the boy.
"I doesn't think so. There's the missis."
A tinge came over the lady's face. "The mistress! Who is she?"
"She's Mrs. Ed'ards. An old lady, what comes to church with buckles in her shoes. And there's Mr.----"
"What is it that you want here?" interrupted the servant girl, advancing again, and addressing the visitor in a not very conciliatory tone.
"I am Lady Level," was the reply, in a ringing, imperious voice. "Call someone to receive me."
It found its way to the girl's alarm. She looked scared, doubting, and finally turned and flew off down a long, dark pa.s.sage. The boy heard the announcement without its ruffling his equanimity in the least degree.
"That's all, ain't it?" asked he, giving the bag a condescending touch with his foot.
"How much am I to pay you?" inquired Lady Level.
The boy paused. "You bain't obliged to pay nothing."
"What is the charge?" repeated Lady Level.
"The charge ain't nothing. If folks like to give anything, it's gived as a gift."
She smiled, and, taking out her purse, gave him half-a-crown. He received it with remarkable satisfaction, and then, with an air of great mystery and cunning, slipped it into his boot.
"But, I say, don't you go and tell, over there, as you gived it me,"
said he, jerking his head in the direction of the railway station. "We are not let take nothing, and there'd be the whole lot of 'em about my ears. You won't tell?"
"No, I will not tell," replied Lady Level, laughing, in spite of her cares and annoyances. And the promising young porter in embryo, giving vent to a shrill whistle, which might have been heard at the two-mile-off station, tore away as fast as his legs would carry him.
The girl came back with a quaint old lady. Her hair was white, her complexion clear and fresh, and her eyes were black and piercing as ever they had been in her youth. She looked in doubt at the visitor, as the servant had done.
"I am told that someone is inquiring for my lord."
"His wife is inquiring for him. I am Lady Level."
Had any doubt been wavering in the old lady's mind, the tones dispelled it. She curtseyed to the ground--the stately, upright, old-fas.h.i.+oned curtsey of the days gone by. A look of distress rose to her face.
"Oh, my lady! That I should live to receive my lord's wife in this unprepared, unceremonious manner! He told me you were in foreign parts, beyond seas."
"I returned to England yesterday, and have left my servants in town.
What is the matter with Lord Level?"
"That your ladys.h.i.+p should come to such a house as this, all unfurnished and disordered! and--I beg your pardon, my lady! I cannot take you through these pa.s.sages," she added, curtseying for Lady Level to go out again. "Deborah, go round and open the front-door."
Lady Level, in the midst of much lamentation, was conducted to the front entrance, and thence ushered into a long, low, uncarpeted room on the left of the dark hall. It was very bare of furniture, chairs and a large table being all that it contained. "It is of no consequence," said Lady Level; "I have come only to see Lord Level, and may not remain above an hour or two. I cannot tell. You are Mrs.
Edwards, I think. I have heard Lord Level mention you."
"My name is Edwards, my lady. I was housekeeper in the late lord's time, and, when a young woman, I had the honour of nursing my lord.
Since the late lord's death, I and my brother, Jacob Drewitt, have mostly lived here. He used to be house steward at Marshdale."
Lady Level removed her bonnet and cloak, and threw them on the table.
She looked impatient and restless, as she listened to the account of her husband's accident. He had received an injury to his knee, when out riding, the day after his arrival at Marshdale; fever had set in, deepening at times to slight delirium.
"I should like to see him," said Lady Level. "Will you take me to his chamber?"
Mrs. Edwards marshalled her upstairs. Curious, in-and-out, wide and shallow stairs they were, with long pa.s.sages and short turnings branching from them. She gently threw open the door of a large, handsome room. On the bed lay Lord Level, his eyes closed.
"He is dozing again, my lady," she whispered. "He is sure to fall to sleep whenever the fever leaves him."
"There is no fire in the room!" exclaimed Lady Level.
"The doctor says there's not to be any, my lady. In the room opposite to this, across the pa.s.sage, you will find a good one. It is my lord's sitting-room when he is well. And here," noiselessly opening a door facing the foot of the bed, "is another chamber, that can be prepared for your ladys.h.i.+p, if you remain."
The housekeeper left the room as she spoke, scarcely knowing whether she stood on her head or her heels, so completely was she confounded by this arrival of Lady Level's--and nothing wherewith to receive her!
Mrs. Edwards had her head and hands full just then.
As Lady Level moved forward, her dress came into contact with a light chair, and moved it. The invalid started, and raised himself on his elbow.
"Why!--who--is it?"
"It is I, Lord Level," she said, advancing to the bed.