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"Dan Sanker must have been mad," observed the Squire.
"Yes, sir, I think he was; leastways not right. In a day or two he had to be fastened down in his berth with brain-fever, and Mr. Conroy said that as he had known me in the past days I had better be the one to sit with him, for he couldn't be left. I was quite taken aback to hear what he said in his mutterings, and hoped it wasn't true."
"Did he get well again?"
"Just for a day or two, sir. The fever left him, but he was in the shockingest state of weakness you could imagine. The night before he died----"
The Squire started up. "Dan Sanker's not dead, Ferrar!"
"Yes he is, sir. It's what I have come to tell of."
"Goodness bless me! Poor Dan dead! Only think of it, Johnny!"
But I was not surprised. From the moment Ferrar first spoke, an instinct had been upon me that it was so. He resumed.
"Everything was done for him that could be, sir. We had a doctor on board--a pa.s.senger going to California--but he could not save him. He said when it came to such awful weakness as that, there could be no saving. Mr. Conroy and the other officers were very kind to him--the skipper too; but they could do nothing. All his fears seemed to be gone then; we could hardly hear his whispers, but he was sensible and calm.
He said he knew G.o.d had forgave him for what he did, and would blot his sin out, and King had forgave him too, and had come to tell him so: he had been to him in the night and talked and smiled happily and said over to him a verse of 'Lord Bateman'----"
"And you say he was in his senses, Ferrar?"
"Yes, sir, that he was. That night he made a confession, Mr. Conroy and the doctor and me being by him. It was he that killed King."
"Bless my heart!" cried the Squire.
"He had seen me sitting with King that afternoon at Malvern, and heard him saying the verses to me. It put his temper up frightful, sir, I being one of their enemies the Frogs; but he says if he'd known it was me that s.n.a.t.c.hed King out of the fight on Sat.u.r.day, he'd not have minded so much. It must have been him that King saw coming, Master Johnny,"
added Ferrar, turning momentarily from the Squire to address me; "when he broke off in the midst of 'Lord Bateman,' and told me, all in a hurry, to go away. He waited till I was gone, and then rushed on to King and began abusing him and knocking him about. King was unsteady through his weak leg, and one of the knocks sent him over the bank. Dan says he was frightened almost to death; he caught up Dr. Teal's green handkercher from a chair and ran to the Well with it; he was too frightened to go and see after King, thinking he had killed him; and he sat down outside the Well and made as if he went to sleep. He never meant to hurt King, he said; it was only pa.s.sion; but he had drunk a lot of strong ale and some wine upon it, and hardly knew what he was about.
He said there was never a minute since but what he had been sorry for it, and he had been always seeing King. He asked me to show him the verses that had been given to me, that King wrote out, 'Lord Bateman'--for I had got them with me at sea, sir--and he kissed them and held them to him till he died."
"Dear, dear!" sighed the Squire.
"And that's all, sir," concluded Ferrar. "Mr. Conroy wrote out a copy of his confession, which I brought along with me to Worcester. Mr. Dan charged me to tell his father, and my own folks, and any other friends I liked that had thought me guilty, and I promised him. He was as placid as a child all the day after that, and died at sundown, so happy and peaceful that it was almost like heaven."
Ferrar broke off with a sob. Poor Dan!
And that was the final ending of the Day of Pleasure. He and King are together again.
XII.
MARGARET RYMER.
They had gone through the snow to evening service at North Crabb, the Squire, Mrs. Todhetley, and Tod, leaving me at home with one of my splitting headaches. Thomas had come in to ask if I would have the lamp, but I told him I would rather be without it. So there I sat on alone, beside the fire, listening to Hannah putting the children to bed upstairs, and looking sleepily out at the snowy landscape.
As the fire became dim, sending the room into gloom, the light outside grew stronger. The moon was high; clear and bright as crystal; what with that, and the perfectly white snow that lay on everything, the night seemed nearly as light as day. The gra.s.s plat outside was a smooth white plain, the cl.u.s.tering shrubs beyond it being also white.
I knew the fire wanted replenishing: I knew that if I sat on much longer, I should fall asleep; but sit on I did, letting the fire go, too listless to move. My eyes were fixed dreamily on the plain of snow, with the still moonlight lying across it. The room grew darker, the landscape lighter.
And asleep, in another minute, I should inevitably have been, but for a circ.u.mstance that suddenly arose. All in a moment--I saw not how or whence it came--a dark figure appeared on the gra.s.s plat, close before the bank of shrubs, right in front of me; the figure of a man, wrapped in a big great-coat. He was standing still and gazing fixedly at the house. Gazing, as it seemed (though that was impossible) at _me_. I was wide awake at once, and sitting bolt upright in the chair.
Yes, there could be no mistake; and it was no delusion. The man appeared to be a tall man, strong and muscular, with a ma.s.s of hair on his face.
What could he want? Was it a robber reconnoitring the premises; peering and peeping to ascertain whether all the world was at church, before he broke in to rifle the house?
No one, void of such an experience, can imagine how dark he looked standing there, amidst the whiteness of all the scene around. In one sense, he stood out plainer than he could have done by daylight, because the contrast was greater. But this sort of light did not show his features, which were shrouded in obscurity.
Presently he moved. Looking to right and left, he took a step forward.
Evidently he was trying to see whether the parlour where I sat was empty or occupied. Should I go out to him? Or should I fling up the window and ask what he wanted? I was not frightened: don't let any one think that: but watching him brought rather a creepy kind of sensation.
And, just then, as I left the chair quietly to open the window, I heard the catch of the garden-gate, and some one came whistling up the path.
The man vanished as if by magic. Whilst I looked, he was gone. It seemed to me that I did not take my eyes off him; but where he went to, or what became of him, I knew not.
"Anybody at home?" called out Tom Coney, as he broke off his whistling and opened the hall-door.
"All right, Tom. Come along."
And, to tell the truth, I was not sorry to see Tom's hearty face. He had stayed away from evening service to sit with his mother.
"I say, Tom, did you see any fellow on the snow there, as you came in?"
"On the snow where?" asked Tom.
"There; just before the shrubs." And I pointed the spot out to him, and told him what had happened. Tom, one of the most practical fellows living, more so, I think, than even Tod, and with less imagination than an ostrich, received the account with incredulity.
"You dropped asleep, Johnny, and fancied it."
"I did not drop asleep, and I did not fancy it. When you came into the garden I was about to open the window and call to him."
"Those headaches are downright stupefying things, Johnny. Jane has them, you know. One day I remember she fell asleep with a bad one, and woke up and said the sofa was on fire."
"Tom, I tell you the man was there. A tall, strong-looking fellow, with a beard. He was staring at the house with all his might, at this room, as it seemed to me, wanting to come forward, I think, but afraid to. He kept close to the laurels, as if he did not wish to be seen, forgetting perhaps that they were white and betrayed him. When you opened the gate, he was there."
"It's odd, then, where he could have put himself," said Tom Coney, not giving in an inch. "I'll vow not a soul was there, man or woman, when I came up the path."
"That's true. He vanished in a moment. Whilst I was looking at him he disappeared."
"Vanished! Disappeared! You talk as though you thought it a ghost, Johnny."
"Ghost be hanged! It was some ill-doing tramp, I expect, trying to look if he might steal into the house."
"Much you know of the ways of tramps, Johnny Ludlow! Tramps don't come showing themselves on snow-lighted, open lawns, in the face and eyes of the front windows: they hide themselves in obscure hedges and byways.
It's a case of headachy sleep, young man, and nothing else."
"Look here, Tom. If the man was there, his footprints will be there; if he was not, as you say, the snow will be smooth and level: come out and see."
We went out at once, Tom catching up a stick in the hall, and crossed the lawn. I was right, and Tom wrong. Sure enough, there were the footprints, plenty of them, indented in the deep snow. Tom gave in then.
"I wish to goodness I had seen him! The fellow should not have got off scot-free, I can tell him that. What tremendous feet he must have! Just look at the size, Johnny. Regular crushers."