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"Na," said Rushmere, "we never gi' people beds in the barn, while there's room in the house. Sit down by the fire, and warm yourself. My darter will gi' ye summat to eat, an' a good pint o' yell foreby. Dolly, help the woman to take off her cloak."
The stranger, who had stood in the shade, now came forward to the fire, and Dorothy a.s.sisted her to remove her tattered cloak. She was so tall that Dorothy was obliged to rise on tiptoes to render this service, and to her no small disgust, observed that the stranger smelt strongly of gin.
"Why, la.s.s," said the farmer, laughing, "you be big enough, an' tall enough, for a grenadier."
"It requires long legs, and strong ones too," returned the woman, taking a seat on the settle by the fire, and putting the large basket on her arm beside her, on the floor, "to travel this rough country. I was on my way to s...o...b.., and missed my path crossing the heath. The snow drifted so in my eyes, it was impossible to see the road. Have you any rabbit skins, or hare skins, to sell. Any old clothes, or rags. I do a little business in that line to support my family, but 'tis hard scratching to get along, these hard times; vittals is so dear, and you country folk expect such bargains, and never trade for cash, that I can't make much by the exchange."
"Have you a husband?" asked the farmer.
"No, nor never had, and don't want one. I'm much better alone. I can lie down mistress and get up master. Married women are slaves. Men think more of their cattle than they do of their wives."
"That's just as the case may be," returned Rushmere. "Some o' them don't deserve much consideration. I ha' allers heard say, a good wife makes a good husband."
"And how many children have you?" asked Mrs. Rushmere, looking suspiciously at her strange guest.
"Two," said the woman, "a girl and a boy. They are too young to tramp the roads. I leave them at home with my mother, while I travel the country to earn them bread."
"And what have you got in your basket?" asked Dorothy, who was as curious as the rest to learn something about their visitor.
"A little of everything. Needles, pins, thread; cotton of both sorts, white and coloured; side-combs for the gals, and pipes and tobacco for the men. Take a look at my wares."
The gaunt creature rose, and placed the basket on the table before Mrs.
Rushmere.
As she stood in the full light of the candle, Dorothy, who had only before caught a partial glimpse of her face, shrunk back as she scanned the vulgar harsh features, and encountered the bold gaze of the tramp.
Pincher, who followed close at her heels, gave an ominous growl, and burst off into a fresh paroxysm of barking.
"That's a cross dog of yours," cried the woman, kicking at Pincher, with her heavy nailed boots.
"You had better not do that?" said Dorothy. "He'll bite you if you ill treat him."
"I wonder you keep such an ugly tempered brute about the house,"
retorted the woman. "It is not pleasant to have such a varmint snapping at one's heels."
"A brave dog like him is sometimes useful," remarked Dorothy, pointedly, "especially in a lone place like this. I have only to say, seize her, Pincher! and he'd have you down in a minute."
"Oh, pray don't," cried the woman, with a hoa.r.s.e cackling laugh, "I don't covet his acquaintance. I think, though, he'd find me too much for him. In my tramps through the country, I've put to silence bigger and stronger brutes than him."
Again Dorothy tried to examine the heavy dark browed countenance of the stranger, and her investigation only increased her mistrust and aversion.
In the meanwhile, Mrs. Rushmere was eagerly exploring the contents of the big basket, and had lain aside several useful articles, with an intent to purchase.
"What is the price of these?"
The woman turned them over with her large coa.r.s.e hands, then reckoned up the amount on her fingers.
"Just three shillings."
"You buy rabbit and hare skins?"
"I would rather take money than trade just now."
Mrs. Rushmere drew her purse from her pocket; it was a heavy one, as she was her own banker, and it generally contained all the money which she received for the produce of the dairy.
Dorothy, who was standing behind her chair, could not help being struck with the eager hungry glance with which the woman eyed the glittering gold and silver coins, and her face became more dark and repulsive than ever.
"Wife," put in the farmer, "doan't be a fule. There be plenty o' rabbit and hare skins in the shed. If she doan't trade for them, let her things bide in her basket. It isn't fair o' the woman to take silver o'
us an' skins of t'other folk."
"You farmers are so cruelly stingy," said the woman angrily, "you won't let a body live, and wheat up to five pounds the quarter. I think I saw you in the market, master. You made a better bargain for your grain than exchanging it for old moth-eaten rabbit skins."
Dorothy again caught the furtive glance of the woman's evil eyes, and recoiled from it as if she had trodden upon a snake.
After a great deal of chaffering and bargaining for various articles, the tramp consented to receive in payment some fine woollen yarn that dangled from the beams, observing, "that she must turn a penny somehow."
She then put aside the basket, and sat down, to discuss the bread and cheese, and tankard of home-brewed ale, that Dorothy placed on the table for her supper.
"You found the roads bad," said Rushmere, refilling his pipe.
"Up to the top of my boots," and the woman lifted up her large foot, which was cased in a heavy highlow, thickly studded with iron nails. "I was near mired, at the lower end of the heath, and began to think I would have to stay there all night. Who would have expected to step into a mud-hole during such a hard frost as this?"
"You be lucky to get out as you did," said the farmer. "That are be s...o...b.. Moss. The ground be allers wet, an' holds the water like a sponge. Many's the good beast that's died in yon quag."
The woman leaned back upon the settle, stretched her feet to the fire, and began leisurely to examine the large hall, from the well garnished beams above her head, to the iron bars that secured the windows.
"These old houses," she observed, "are much stronger than the new. The people in the old times knew what they were about when they built them.
Arn't you afraid of being robbed in this lonely out of the way place?"
"Never think of such a thing," said Rushmere, "we live among honest folk. I keep a good blunderbuss loaded over the door, an' thieves would na' find it an easy job to get in through these iron bars. We never keep ony thing o' value in the house, to tempt them sort o' chaps, wi' a bank so near.
"Have another gla.s.s o' ale, la.s.s? Art fond o' nuts? Dolly, bring some o'
those filberts out o' the sack in the pantry, and the crackers foreby."
Dorothy brought her ap.r.o.n full of nuts. "Catch?" she cried, in a laughing tone, as she threw a double handful into the tramp's lap.
The woman caught them, and laughed too.
Dorothy turned to the dresser, and a strange expression came over her face.
After the woman had eaten the nuts, and seen the bottom of the tankard, she began to yawn, and asked, "if she could lie down and sleep beside the fire?"
"I will show you a room; follow me," said Dorothy.
The woman seemed very reluctant to accept the offer, pleading various excuses. Her muddy boots, her dirty clothes, and the necessity of her being off by daybreak in the morning, to all of which Dorothy turned a deaf ear, positively insisting on her going to bed.
"Well, if you will have it so, miss, I will no longer refuse a good offer. I have not been inside a bed for many months past, and am used to sleep, wet or dry, in the barn, or by the hearth, as it may happen.
People are not generally so anxious about the comfort of visitors like me."
Dorothy lighted a candle, and led the way up the wide oak staircase at the bottom of the hall to the chambers above.