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Henrietta followed listlessly, and fancied in the sullenness of her apathy that she was proof against aught that could happen. But when she had descended the stairs and neared the door of Mr. Rogers's room--which was in a dusky pa.s.sage--she found herself, to her astonishment, brushing past a row of people, who flattened themselves against the wall to let her pa.s.s. Their eyes and their hard breathing--perhaps because she was amongst them before she saw them--impressed her so disagreeably that her heart fluttered, and she paused. For an imperceptible instant she was on the point of turning and going back. But, fortunately, at that moment the door opened wide, Ann stood aside, and Mrs. Gilson showed herself. She beckoned to the girl to enter.
"Come in, miss," she said gruffly, as Henrietta complied. "Here's some gentlemen want to ask you a question or two."
Henrietta saw two persons with their faces turned towards her seated behind a table, which bore ink and paper and one or two calf-bound books. Behind these were three or four other persons standing; and beside the door close to her were as many more, also on their feet.
But nowhere could she see the dreaded face of her brother, or, indeed, any face that she knew. And after advancing firmly enough into the room, she stopped, and, turning, looked uncertainly at Mrs. Gilson.
"There must be some mistake," she murmured. "I have come into the----"
"Wrong room, miss?"--the speaker was Bishop, who was one of the three or four who stood behind the two at the table. "No, there's no mistake, miss," he continued, with exaggerated cheerfulness. "It's just a formality. Only just a formality. These gentlemen wish to ask you one or two questions."
The colour rose to her cheeks.
"To ask me?" she repeated, with a slight ring of hauteur in her voice.
"Just so," Bishop answered. "It will be all right, I am sure. But attend to this gentleman, if you please, and answer his questions."
He indicated with his finger the one seated before him.
The girl, half angry, half frightened, lowered her eyes and met those of the person at the table. Apparently her aspect had checked the exordium he had prepared; for instead of addressing her in the tones which were wont to fill the justice-room at Ambleside, Mr. h.o.r.n.yold, rector and magistrate, sat back in his chair, and stared at her in silence. It was evident that his astonishment was great. He was a portly man, and tall, about forty years old, and, after his fashion, handsome. He had well-formed features and a mobile smile; but his face was masterful--overmasterful, some thought; and his eyes were hard, when a sly look did not soften, without much improving, their expression. The girl before him was young, adorably fresh, above all, beautiful; and the smile of the man peeped from under the mask of the justice. He stared at her, and she at him, and perhaps of the two he was the more taken aback. At any rate, it was Henrietta who broke the silence.
"I do not understand," she said, with ill-suppressed indignation, "why I am here. Are you sure that there is no mistake?"
He found his voice then.
"Quite sure," he said drily. And he laid down the pen with which he had been toying while he stared at her. He sat a little more erect in his chair. "There is no mistake," he continued, "though for your sake, young woman, I wish I could think there was. I wish I could think there was," he repeated in a more indulgent tone, "since you seem, at any rate, a more respectable person than I expected to see."
"Sir!"
The girl's eyes opened wide. Her face was scarlet.
He leaned forward.
"Come, my girl," he said--and his familiar tone struck her, as it were, in the face,--never had such a tone been used to her before!
"Let us have no nonsense. You will not improve your case that way. Let me tell you, we are accustomed to all sorts here. You must speak when you are told to speak, and be silent when you are bid, and in the meantime listen to me! Listen to me, I say!" staying by an imperious nod the angry remonstrance that was on her lips. "And remember where you are, if you wish to be well treated. If you are sensible and tell the truth, some other course will be found than that which, it is to be feared, must end this business."
"But by what right," Henrietta cried, striving to command both her rage and her fear--"by what right----"
"Am I about to question you?"--with a smirk of humour and a glance at the audience. "By the right of the law, young woman, which I would have you know is of some account here, however it may stand in Lancashire."
"The law?" she stammered. And she looked round terrified. "Why? Why?
What have I done?" she cried pathetically.
For a moment all was dark before her.
He laughed slyly.
"That's to be seen," he said. "No hanging matter," he continued humorously, "I hope. And as it's good law that everybody's innocent--that's so, Mr. Dobbie, is it not?"--he addressed the clerk--"until he's found to be guilty, let somebody set the young woman a chair."
"I can stand!" she cried.
"Nay, you sit down!" muttered a gruff voice in her ear. And a hand--it was Mrs. Gilson's--pressed her down in the chair. "And you answer straight out," the woman continued coolly, in defiance of the scandalised look which Mr. Dobbie, the clerk, cast upon her, "and there's not one of 'em can do you any harm."
The magistrate nodded.
"That's true," he said tolerantly, "always supposing that you've done no wrong, my girl--no wrong beyond getting into bad company, as I trust will turn out to be the case. Now, Mr. Dobbie, take down her answers. What's your name, my girl, first?"
Henrietta looked at him steadily; she was trying to place herself in these new conditions. Something like composure was coming back to her flushed and frightened face. She reflected; and having reflected, she was silent.
He fancied that she had not heard, or did not understand.
"Your name, young woman," he repeated, "and your last place of abode?
Speak up! And don't be afraid."
But she did not answer.
He frowned.
"Come, come," he said. "Did you hear me? Where is your home, and what do you call yourself? You are not the man's wife, I know. We know as much as that, you see, so you may as well be frank."
"What is the charge against me?" She spoke slowly, and her face was now set and stubborn. "Of what am I accused?"
Mr. h.o.r.n.yold's face turned a brick red. He did not rule three parishes through three curates, reserving to himself only the disciplinary powers he was now exercising, to be thwarted by a run-the-country girl; who, in spite of her looks, was, ten to one, no better than the imprudent wenches the overseers were continually bringing before him.
He knew at least the company she kept. He raised his voice.
"I am not here to answer your questions!" he said, bending his brows.
"But you mine! You mine!" he repeated, rapping the table sharply. "Do you hear? Now, you will at once tell me----"
He broke off. The clerk had touched his sleeve and was whispering in his ear. He frowned impatiently, but listened. And after a moment he shrugged his shoulders.
"Very well," he said. "Tell her!"
The clerk, a shabby man with a scratch wig and a little gla.s.s ink-bottle at his b.u.t.tonhole, raised his eyes, and looking at her over his gla.s.ses, spoke:
"You are not yet charged," he said; "but if you cannot give a satisfactory account of yourself you will be charged with receiving, harbouring, and a.s.sisting one William Walterson the younger, otherwise Stewart, otherwise Malins, against whom indictments for various felonies and treason felonies have been found. And with aiding and abetting the escape of the said William Walterson, in whose company you have been found. And with being accessory after the fact to various felonies----"
"To murder!" said Mr. h.o.r.n.yold, cutting him short emphatically. "To murder! amongst other things. That is the charge, if you must know it.
So now"--he rapped the table sharply--"answer at once, and the truth.
What is your name? And where was your last place of abode?"
But Henrietta, if she were willing to answer, could not. At the sound of that dreadful word "murder!"--they hanged lightly, so lightly in those days!--the colour had fled from her face. The darkness that had confused her a while before hid all. She kept her seat, she even retained her erect posture; but the hands which she raised before her as if to ward off something groped idly in the air.
Murder! No wonder that she lost consciousness for a moment, or that h.o.r.n.yold, secretly relishing her beauty, thought that he had found the weapon that would soon bring her to her knees! or that the little audience by the door, listening awestruck, held their breath. The wonder was that only one of them judged from the girl's gesture that she was fainting. Only one acted. Mrs. Gilson stepped forward and shook her roughly by the shoulder.
"Words break no bones!" the landlady said without ceremony--and not without an angry look at the clerk, who raised his pen as if he would interpose. "Don't you make a fool of yourself. But do you tell them what they want to know. And your friends will settle with them.
Murder, indeed! Pack of boddles!"
"Very good advice," said the magistrate, smiling indulgently.
"But----"