Janice Meredith - LightNovelsOnl.com
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Whatever will Tibbie say when she hears!"
It was a little after ten that evening when the squire and Evatt parted for the night in the upper hail, the former being, as usual, not tipsy, but in a jovial mood toward all things; and as this att.i.tude is conducive to sleep, his snores were ere long reverberating to all waking ears. One pair of these were so keenly alive to every noise that not the chirp of a cricket escaped them, and from time to time their owner started at the smallest sound. Owing to this attention, they heard presently the creak of the stairs, the soft opening of the front door, and even the swish of feet on the gra.s.s. Then, though the ears fairly strained to catch the least noise, came a silence, save for the squire's trumpeting, for what seemed to the girl a period fairly interminable.
Finally the rustling of the gra.s.s told of the return of the prowler, and as the girl heard it she once more began trembling, "Oh!" she moaned. "If only I had n't--if only he'd go away!" She rose from the bed, and stole to the window.
"Mr. Evatt, I'm so frightened, I don't dare," she whispered to the figure standing below. "Wait till to-morrow night!
"Nonsense!" said the man, so loudly that Janice was more cared than ever. "I told ye it must be to-night. Come down quickly."
"Oh, please!" moaned Janice.
"Dost want to be the wife of that gawk?" demanded Evatt, impatiently.
Though he did not know it, the girl vacillated. "At least I'm not frightened of Phil," was her thought.
"Well," called the man more loudly, "art going to keep me here all night?"
"Hus.h.!.+" whispered Janice. "Thee'll wake--"
"Belike I will," he retorted irritably. "And if they ask me what 's in the wind, they shall have the truth. Odd's life!
I'm not a man to be fooled by a chit of a girl."
"Oh, hus.h.!.+" again she begged, more frightened at the prospect of her parents knowing than by any other possibility. "I'll come if you'll only be quiet."
She took a small bundle, hurriedly stole downstairs, and pa.s.sed out of the house.
"Now ye've come to your senses," said the man. "Give me the bundle and your hand," he continued, and set out at a rapid pace across the lawn, having almost to drag the girl, her feet carried her so unwillingly. "Over with ye," he ordered, as they reached the stile at the corner, and when Janice descended she found two horses. .h.i.tched to the fence and felt a little comforted by the mere presence of Daisy. She was quickly mounted, and they set off, the girl so helpless in her fright that Evatt had to hold her horse's bridle as well as his own.
"Burn it!" exclaimed Evatt, presently, "art never going to end thy weeping?"
"If you would only have waited till--" sobbed Janice.
"'T was no time for s.h.i.+lly-shallying," interrupted the man.
"Dost not see that we had to take to-night, when the groom was gone, for there 'd have been no getting the horses with him sleeping in the stable?"
"What if we meet him returning?" cried the girl, her voice shaking.
"'T would little matter. Think ye he could catch us afoot?"
"But he could tell dadda."
"And by that time we shall be two-thirds of the way to Amboy. 'T is but a twenty miles, and we should be there by three. Then if we meet no delay in getting a boat, we shall be on the 'Asia' near seven. By eight the chaplain will have made us twain one."
"Oh!" moaned the girl, "what ever will dadda say?"
As this was a question no one could answer, a silence ensued, which lasted until they rode into Brunswick. Guiding the horses upon the green, to reduce the beat of their hoofs to a minimum, Evatt turned off the gra.s.s at the river road and headed toward the bridge across the Raritan. As they approached, a noise of some kind arrested Evatt's attention, and he was just checking the horses when a voice cried:--
"Stand!"
Janice gave a startled cry which instantly set a dog barking.
"Keep silence!" again ordered the unseen man.
Evatt, after an oath below his breath, demanded, "By what right do ye stop us, whoever ye are?"
"By the right of powder and ball," remarked the voice, drily.
Again the dog barked, and both Evatt and the unseen man swore. "Curse the beast!" said the latter. "Hist, Charles!
Call the dog, or he'll wake the town."
Another voice from a little distance called, "Clarion!" in a guarded inflection; meantime the hound had discovered his mistress, and was jumping about her horse, giving little yelps of pleasure.
In another instant Charles came running up. "What's wrong?" he questioned.
"'T is a couple of riders I've halted," said the voice from the shadow.
"Out of the way!" ordered Evatt. "Ye've no right to prevent us from going forward. I've pistols in my holsters, and ye'd best be careful how ye take the law into your own hands."
The groom gave an exclamation as he recognised the riders; and paying no attention to Evatt, he sprang to the side of the girl and rested his hand on the bridle, as if to prevent her horse from moving, while he asked in amazement: "What brings you here?"
Speechless and shamed, the girl hung her head.
"Let go that bridle, ye whelp!" bl.u.s.tered Evatt, throwing back the flap of his holster and pulling out a heavy horse pistol.
As he made the motion, the bondsman dropped the rein and seized the hand that held the weapon. For a moment there was a sharp struggle, in which the third man, who sprang from the shadow, joined. Nor did Evatt cease resistance until three men more came running up, when, overborne by numbers, he was dragged from his horse and held to the ground. In the whole contest both sides had maintained an almost absolute silence, as if each had reasons for not waking the villagers.
"Stuff a sod of gra.s.s in his mouth to keep him quiet,"
ordered Charles, panting, "and tie him hand and foot." Taking a lantern from one of the men, he walked back to the speechless and frightened girl and held the light to her face. "'T is not possible you--you--oh! I'll never believe it of you."
With pride and mortification struggling for mastery, Janice replied: "What you think matters not to me."
"You were eloping with this man?"
Though the groom's thoughts were of no moment to the girl, she replied: "To escape marrying Philemon Hennion."
"What things women are!" he exclaimed contemptuously.
"You deserve no better than to be his doll common, but--"
"We were to be married," cried Janice.
"In the reign of Queen d.i.c.k!"
"This very day on the 'Asia' frigate."
"A likely tale," jeered the man. "Bring that fellow down to the boat," he called, and catching hold of the bridle, he started walking.
"Whither are you taking me?" inquired Janice, in fright.
"The parson is down by the river, helping transfer the powder, and I'm going to leave you with him to take back to Greenwood."