The Broad Highway by Jeffery Farnol (hot novels to read .txt) đ
"For none of which you have hitherto found a publisher?" inquired Mr. Grainger.
"Not as yet," said I, "but I have great hopes of my Brantome, as you are probably aware this is the first time he has ever been translated into the English."
"Hum!" said Sir Richard, "ha!--and in the meantime what do you intend to do?"
"On that head I have as yet come to no definite conclusion, sir," I answered.
"I have been wondering," began Mr. Grainger, somewhat diffidently, "if you would care to accept a position in my office. To be sure the remuneration would be small at first and quite insignificant in comparison to the income you have been in the receipt of."
"But it would have been money earned," said I, "which is infinitely preferable to that for whic
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âThatâs the word; sometimes it gets so bad as Iâm minded to do away wiâ myselfââ
âStrange!â I began.
âNot a bit,â said be; âwhen youâve been a-walkinâ anâ a-walkinâ all day past âedge and âedge, and tree and tree, itâs bad enough, but itâs worse when the sunâs gone out, anâ you foller the glimmer oâ the road on and on, past âedges as ainât âedges, and trees as ainât trees, but things as touch you as you pass, and reach out arter you in the dark, behind. Theerâs one on âem, back theer on the Cranbrook road, looks like an oak-tree in the daytimeâah, anâ a big âunâitâs nearly âad me three times aâreadyâonce by the leg, once by the arm, and once by the neck. I donât pass it arter dark no more, but itâll âave me yetâmark my wordsâitâll âave me one oâ these fine nights; and theyâll find me a-danglinâ in the gray oâ the dawn!â
âDo you mean that you are afraid?â I inquired.
âNo, not afeared exactly; itâs jest the lonelinessâthe lonely quietness. Why, Lord! you arenât got no notion oâ the tricks the trees and âedges gets up to aâ nightsânobody âas but us as tramps the roads. Bill Nye knowed, same as I know, but Bill Nyeâs dead; cut âis throat, âe did, wiâ one oâ âis own razorsâunder a âedge.â
âAnd what for?â I inquired, as the Pedler paused to spit lugubriously into the road again.
âNobody knowed but me. William Nye âe were a tinker, and a rare, merry âun âe wereâa little man always up to âis jinkinâ and jokinâ and laughinâ. âDick,â âe used to say (but Richard I were baptized, though they calls me Dick for short), âDick,â âe used to say, âdâye know that theer big oak-treeâthe big, âoller oak as stands at the crossroads a mile and a âalf out oâ Cranbrook? A man might do for âisself very nice, and quiet, tucked away inside of it, Dick,â says âe; âitâs such a nice, quiet place, so snug and dark, I wonder as nobody does. I never pass by,â says âe, âbut I takes a peep inside, jest to make sure as theer arenât no legs a-danglinâ, nor nobody âunched up dead in the dark. Itâs such a nice, quiet place,â e used to say, shakinâ âis lead, and smilinâ sad-like, âI wonder as nobodyâs never thought of it afore.â Well, one day, sure enough, poor Bill Nye disappearedânobody knowed wheer. Bill, as I say, was a merry sort, always ready wiâ a joke, and thatâs apt to get a man friends, and they searched for âim âigh and low, but neither âide nor âair oâ poor Bill did they find. At last, one eveninâ I âappened to pass the big oakâthe âoller oak, and mindinâ Billâs words, thinks Iââereâs to see if âtis empty as Bill said. Goinâ up to it I got down on my âands and knees, and, strikinâ a light, looked inside; and there, sure enough, was poor Bill Nye hunched up inside of it wiâ a razor in âis âand, and âis âead nigh cut offâand what wiâ one thing and another, a very unpleasant sight he were.â
âAnd whyâwhy did he do it?â I asked.
âBecause âe âad to, oâ courseâitâs jest the loneliness. Theyâll find me some day, danglinââI never could abide âblood myselfâdanglinâ to the thing as looks like a oak tree in the daytime.â
âWhat do you mean?â said I.
The Pedler sighed, shook his head, and shouldered his brooms.
âItâs jest the loneliness!â said he, and, spitting over this shoulder, trudged upon his way.
CHAPTER XVI
HOW I HEARD THE STEPS OF ONE WHO DOGGED ME IN THE SHADOWS
And, in a little while, I rose, and buckled on my knapsack. The shadows were creeping on apace, but the sky was wonderfully clear, while, low down upon the horizon, I saw the full-orbed moon, very broad and big. It would be a brilliant night later, and this knowledge rejoiced me not a little. Before me stretched a succession of hillsâthat chain of hills which, I believe, is called the Weald, and over which the dim road dipped, and wound, with, on either hand, a rolling country, dark with wood, and coppiceâfull of mystery. The wind had quite fallen, but from the hedges, came sudden rustlings and soft, unaccountable noises. Once, something small and dark scuttered across the road before me, and once a bird, hidden near by, set up a loud complaint, while, from the deeps of a neighboring wood, came the mournful note of a night-jar.
And, as I walked, I bethought me of poor Bill Nye, the Tinker. I could picture him tramping upon this very road, his jingling load upon his back, and the âlonelinessâ upon and around him. A small man, he would be, with a peaked face, little, round, twinkling eyes, grizzled hair, and a long, blue chin. How I came to know all this I cannot tell, only it seemed he must be so. On he went, his chin first upon one shoulder, and now upon the other, shooting furtive glances at hedges which were not hedges, and trees which were not trees. Somewhere there was a âthingâ that looked like a big oak tree in the daytimeâa hollow oak. On he went through the shadows, on and on. Presently he turned out of the road, and there, sure enough, was the oak itself. Kneeling down, he slipped off his burden and pushed it through a jagged hole at the root. Then he glanced round him, a long, stealthy look, down at the earth and up at the sky, and crept into the tree. In the dimness I could see him fumble for the thing he wanted, pause to thumb its edge, and, throwing up his chin, raise his handâ
âFolly!â said I aloud, and stopped suddenly in my stride.
The moonâs rim was just topping the trees to my left, and its light, feeble though it was as yet, served to show that I had reached a place where four roads met.
Now, casting my eyes about me, they were attracted by a great tree that grew near by, a tree of vast girth and bigness. And, as I looked, I saw that it was an oak-tree, near the root of which there was a jagged, black hole.
How long I stood staring at this, I cannot say, but, all at once, the leaves of the tree were agitated as by a breath of wind, and rustled with a sound indescribably desolate, and from the dark mass rose the long-drawn, mournful cry of some night bird.
Heedless of my direction, I hurried away, yet, ever when I had left it far behind, I glanced back more than once ere its towering branches were lost to my view.
So I walked on through the shadows, past trees that were not trees, and hedges that were not hedges, but frightful phantoms, rather, lifting menacing arms above my head, and reaching after me with clutching fingers. Time and again, ashamed of such weakness, I cursed myself for an imaginative fool, but kept well in the middle of the road, and grasped my staff firmly, notwithstanding.
I had gone, perhaps, some mile or so in this way, alternately rating and reasoning with myself, when I suddenly fancied I heard a step behind me, and swung round upon my heel, with ready stick; but the road stretched away empty as far as I could see. Having looked about me on all sides, I presently went on again, yet, immediately, it seemed that the steps began also, keeping time with my own, now slow, now fast, now slow again; but, whenever I turned, the road behind was apparently as empty and desolate as ever.
I can conceive of few things more nerve-racking than the knowledge that we are being dogged by something which we can only guess at, and that all our actions are watched by eyes which we cannot see. Thus, with every step, I found the situation grow more intolerable, for though I kept a close watch behind me and upon the black gloom of the hedges, I could see nothing. At length, however, I came upon a gap in the hedge where was a gate, and beyond this, vaguely outlined against a glimmer of sky, I saw a dim figure.
Hereupon, running forward, I set my hand upon the gate, and leaping over, found myself face to face with a man who carried a gun across his arm. If I was startled at this sudden encounter he was no less so, and thus we stood eyeing each other as well as we might in the half light.
âWell,â I demanded, at last, âwhat do you mean by following me like this?â
âI arenât follered ye,â retorted the man.
âBut I heard your steps behind me.â
âNot mine, master. Iâve sat and waited âere âarf a hour, or more, for a poachinâ coveââ
âBut some one was following me.â
âWell, it werenât I. A keeper I be, a-lookinâ for a poachinâ cove just about your size, and itâs precious lucky for you as you are a-wearinâ that there bell-crowned âat!â
âWhy so?â
âBecause, if you âadnât âappened to be a-wearinâ that there bell-crowner, and I âadnât âappened to be of a argifyinâ and inquirinâ turn oâ mind, I should haâ filled you full oâ buckshot.â
âOh?â said I.
âYes,â said he, nodding, while I experienced a series of cold chills up my spine, ânot a blessed doubt of it. Poachers,â he went on, âdonât wear bell-crowned âats as a ruleâI never seed one as did; and so, while I was a-watchinâ of you beâind this âere âedge, I argies the matter in my mind. âRobert,â I says to meself, âRobert,â I sez, âdid you ever âappen to see a poachinâ cove in a bell-crowner afore? No, you never did,â sez I. âBut, on the other âand, this âere cove is the very spit oâ the poachinâ cove as Iâm a-lookinâ for. True!â sez I to meself, âbut this âere cove is a-wearinâ of a bell-crowner âat, but the poachinâ cove never wore a bell-crownerânor never will.â Still, I must say I come very near pullinâ trigger on yeâjust to make sure. So ye see it were precious lucky for you as you was a-wearinâ oâ that thereââ
âIt certainly was,â said I, turning away.
ââthat there bell-crowner, and likewise as Iâm a man of a natâral gift for argiment, and of a inquirinâââ
âWithout doubt,â said I, vaulting over the gate into the road once more.
ââturn oâ mind, because if I âadnât âaâ been, and you âadnât âaâ wore that there bell-crownerââ
âThe consequences are unpleasantly obvious!â said I, over my shoulder, as I walked on down the road.
ââI should haâ shot yeâlike a dog!â he shouted, hanging over the gate to do so.
And, when I had gone on some distance, I took off that which the man had called a âbell-crowner,â and bestowed upon it a touch, and looked at it as I had never done before; and there was gratitude in look and touch, for tonight it had, indeed, stood my friend.
Slowly, slowly the moon, at whose advent the starry host âpaled their ineffectual fires,â mounted into a cloudless heaven, higher and higher, in queenly majesty, until the dark world was filled with her glory, and the road before me became transformed into a silver track splashed here and there with the inky shadow of hedge and trees, and
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