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In the kitchen things were not more orderly; M. M.'s lean maid was making merry with the bailiff, and a fat and dreadful trollop with one eye--tipsy, noisy, and pugnacious.
Poor little Sally Nutter and her maids kept dismal vigil in her bed-room. But that her neighbours and her lawyer would in no sort permit it, the truth is, the frightened little soul would long ago have made herself wings, and flown anywhere for peace and safety.
It is remarkable how long one good topic, though all that may be said upon it has been said many scores of times, will serve the colloquial purposes of the good folk of the kitchen or the nursery. There was scarcely half-an-hour in the day during which the honest maids and their worthy little mistress did not discuss the dreadful Mary Matchwell. They were one and all, though in different degrees, indescribably afraid of her. Her necromantic pretensions gave an indistinctness and poignancy to their horror. She seemed to know, by a diabolical intuition, what everybody was about--she was so noiseless and stealthy, and always at your elbow when you least expected. Those large dismal eyes of hers, they said, glared green in the dark like a cat's; her voice was sometimes so coa.r.s.e and deep, and her strength so unnatural, that they were often on the point of believing her to be a man in disguise. She was such a blasphemer, too; and could drink what would lay a trooper under the table, and yet show it in nothing but the superintensity of her Satanic propensities. She was so malignant, and seemed to bear to all G.o.d's creatures so general a malevolence, that her consistent and superlative wickedness cowed and paralysed them. The enigma grew more horrible every day and night, and they felt, or fancied, a sort of influence stealing over them which benumbed their faculty of resistance, and altogether unstrung their nerves.
The grand compotation going on in the parlour waxed louder and wilder as the night wore on. There were unseen guests there, elate and inspiring, who sat with the revellers--phantoms who attend such wa.s.sail, and keep the ladle of the punch-bowl clinking, the tongue of the songster glib and tuneful, and the general mirth alive and furious. A few honest folk, with the gift of a second sight in such matters, discover their uncanny presence--leprous impurity, insane blasphemy, and the stony grin of unearthly malice--and keep aloof.
To heighten their fun, this jovial company bellowed their abominable ballads in the hall, one of them about 'Sally M'Keogh,' whose sweetheart was hanged, and who cut her throat with his silver-mounted razor, and they hooted their gibes up the stairs. And at last Mary Matchwell, provoked by the pa.s.sive quietude of her victim, summoned the three revellers from the kitchen, and invaded the upper regions at their head--to the unspeakable terror of poor Sally Nutter--and set her demon fiddler a sc.r.a.ping, and made them and Dirty Davy's clerk dance a frantic reel on the lobby outside her bed-room door, locked and bolted inside, you may be sure.
In the midst of this monstrous festivity and uproar, there came, all on a sudden, a reverberating double-knock at the hall-door, so loud and long that every hollow, nook, and pa.s.sage of the old house rang again.
Loud and untimely as was the summons, it had a character, not of riot, but of alarm and authority. The uproar was swallowed instantly in silence. For a second only the light of the solitary candle shone upon the pale, scowling features of Mary Matchwell, and she quenched its wick against the wall. So the Walpurgis ended in darkness, and the company instinctively held their breaths.
There was a subdued hum of voices outside, and a tramping on the crisp gravel, and the champing and snorting of horses, too, were audible.
'Does none o' yez see who's in it?' said the blind fiddler.
'Hold your tongue,' hissed Mary Matchwell with a curse, and visiting the cunning pate of the musician with a smart knock of the candlestick.
'I wisht I had your thumb undher my grinder,' said the fiddler, through his teeth, 'whoever you are.'
But the rest was lost in another and a louder summons at the hall-door, and a voice of authority cried sternly,
'Why don't you open the door?--hollo! there--I can't stay here all night.'
'Open to him, Madam, I recommend you,' said Dirty Davy, in a hard whisper; 'will I go?'
'Not a step; not a word;' and Mary Matchwell griped his wrist.
But a window in Mrs. Nutter's room was opened, and Moggy's voice cried out--
'Don't go, Sir; for the love o' goodness, don't go. Is it Father Roach that's in it?'
''Tis I, woman--Mr. Lowe--open the door, I've a word or two to say.'
CHAPTER XCII.
THE WHER-WOLF.
About a quarter of an hour before this, Mr. Paul Dangerfield was packing two trunks in his little parlour, and burning letters industriously in the fire, when his keen ear caught a sound at which a prophetic instinct within him vibrated alarm. A minute or two before he had heard a stealthy footstep outside. Then he heard the cook walk along the pa.s.sage, muttering to herself, to the hall-door, where there arose a whispering. He glanced round his shoulder at the window. It was barred.
Then lifting the table and its load lightly from before him, he stood erect, fronting the door, and listening intently. Two steps on tip-toe brought him to it, and he placed his fingers on the key. But he recollected a better way. There was one of those bolts that rise and fall perpendicularly in a series of rings, and bar or open the door by a touch to a rope connected with it by a wire and a crank or two.
He let the bolt softly drop into its place; the rope was within easy reach, and with his spectacles gleaming white on the door, he kept humming a desultory tune, like a man over some listless occupation.
Mr. Paul Dangerfield was listening intently, and stepped as softly as a cat. Then, with a motion almost elegant, he dropt his right hand lightly into his coat-pocket, where it lay still in ambuscade.
There came a puffing night air along the pa.s.sage, and rattled the door; then a quiet shutting of the hall-door, and a shuffling and breathing near the parlour.
Dangerfield, humming his idle tune with a white and sharpening face, and a gaze that never swerved, extended his delicately-shaped fingers to the rope, and held it in his left hand. At this moment the door-handle was suddenly turned outside, and the door sustained a violent jerk.
'Who's there?' demanded the harsh, prompt accents of Dangerfield, suspending his minstrelsy. 'I'm busy.'
'Open the door--we've a piece of intelligence to gi'e ye.'
'Certainly--but don't be tedious.' (He drew the string, and the bolt shot up). 'Come in, Sir.'
The door flew open; several strange faces presented themselves on the threshold, and at the same instant, a stern voice exclaimed--
'Charles Archer, I arrest you in the king's name.'
The last word was lost in the stunning report of a pistol, and the foremost man fell with a groan. A second pistol already gleamed in Dangerfield's hand, and missed. With a spring like a tiger he struck the hesitating constable in the throat, laying his scalp open against the door-frame, and stamping on his face as he fell; and clutching the third by the cravat, he struck at his breast with a knife, already in his hand. But a pistol-shot from Lowe struck his right arm, scorching the cloth; the dagger and the limb dropped, and he staggered back, but recovered his equilibrium, and confronted them with a white skull-like grin, and a low 'ha, ha, ha!'
It was all over, and the silver spectacles lay shattered on the floor, like a broken talisman, and a pair of gray, strangely-set, wild eyes glared upon them.
The suddenness of his a.s.sault, his disproportioned physical strength and terrific pluck, for a second or two, confounded his adversaries; but he was giddy--his right arm dead by his side. He sat down in a chair confronting them, his empty right hand depending near to the floor, and a thin stream of blood already trickling down his knuckles, his face smiling, and shining whitely with the damp of anguish, and the cold low 'ha, ha, ha!' mocking the reality of the scene.
'Heinous old villain!' said Lowe, advancing on him.
'Well, gentlemen, I've shown fight, eh?--and now I suppose you want my watch, and money, and keys--eh?'
'Read the warrant, Sir,' said Lowe, sternly.
'Warrant! hey--warrant?--why, this is something new--will you be so good as to give me a gla.s.s of water--thank you--hold the paper a moment longer--I can't get this arm up.' With his left hand he set down the tumbler-gla.s.s, and then held up the warrant.
'Thank ye. Well, this warrant's for Charles Archer.'
'_Alias_ Paul Dangerfield--if you read, Sir.'
'Thank you--yes--I see--that's news to me. Oh! Mr. Lowe--I did not see _you_--I haven't hurt you, I hope? Why the plague do you come at these robbing hours? We'd have all fared better had you come by daylight.'
Lowe did not take the trouble to answer him.
'I believe you've _killed_ that constable in the exercise of his duty, Sir; the man's dead,' said Lowe, sternly.
'Another gloss on my text; why invade me like housebreakers?' said Dangerfield with a grim scoff.
'No violence, Sirrah, on your peril--the prisoner's wounded,' said Lowe, catching the other fellow by the collar and thrusting him back: he had gathered himself up giddily, and swore he'd have the scoundrel's life.
'Well, gentlemen, you have made a _false_ arrest, and shot me while defending my person--_you_--four to one!--and caused the death of your accomplice; what more do you want?'
'You must accompany us to the county gaol, Sir; where I'll hand in your committal.'
'Dr. Toole, I presume, may dress my arm?'
'Certainly, Sir.'