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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O Blind, and more than blind! Surely this was a warning, an omen to heedâto shiver over, despite the warm sun!
But, seeing the blood, I laughed, and strode villagewards, blithe of heart and light of foot.
O Blind, and more than blind!
CHAPTER XVIII
IN WHICH I HEAR NEWS OF SIR MAURICE VIBART
âWhich I saysâLord love me!â
I plunged the iron back into the fire, and, turning my head, espied a figure standing in the doorway; and, though the leather hat and short, round jacket had been superseded by a smart groomâs livery, I recognized the Postilion.
âSo âelp me, Bob, if this ainât a piece oâ luck!â he exclaimed, and, with the words, he removed his hat and fell to combing his short, thick hair with the handle of his whip.
âIâm glad you think so,â said I.
âYou can drownd me if it ainât!â said he.
âAnd, pray, how is the gentleman whoâhappened to fall and hurt himself, if you rememberâin the storm?â
ââAppened to fall anâ âurt âisself?â repeated the Postilion, winking knowingly, ââurt âisself,â says you âWalker!â says I, âWalker!ââ with which he laid his forefinger against the side of his nose and winked again.
âWhat might you be pleased to mean?â
âI means as a gent âappeninâ to fall in the dark may pârâaps cut âis âead openâbut âe donât give âisself two black eyes, a bloody nose, a split lip, anâ three broken ribs, all at onceâit ainât natâral, wâich if you says contrairy, I remarksââWalker!â Lord!â continued the Postilion, seeing I did not speak, âLord! it must âaâ been a pretty warm go while it lastedâyou put âim to sleep sound enough; it took me over a hour to Tonbridge, anâ âe never moved till âeâd been put to bed at âThe Chequersâ anâ a doctor sent for. Ah! anâ a nice time I âad of it, what wiâ chamber-maids a-runninâ up anâ down stairs to see the âpoor gentleman,â anâ everybody a-starinâ at me, anâ a-shakinâ their âeads, anâ all a-axinâ questions, one atop oâ the other, till the doctor come. âOw did this âappen, me man?â says âe. âA haccident!â says I. âA haccident?â says the doctor, wiâ a look in âis eye as I didnât just like. âAh!â says I, âfell on âis âeadâout oâ the chaise,â says I, âstruck a stone, or summâat,â says I. âDid âe fall of âis own accord?â says the doctor. âAh, for sure!â says I. âHumph!â says the doctor, âwhat wiâ âis eyes, anâ âis nose, anâ âis lip, looks to me as if some one âad âelped âim.â âThen you must be a damâ fool!â says a voice, anâ thereâs my gentleman âNumber One, you know, a-sittinâ up in bed anâ doinâ âis âardest to frown. âSir?â says the doctor. âSir! to you,â says my gentleman, âthis honest fellow tells the truth. I did fall out oâ the accursed chaiseâanâ be damned to you!â says âe. âDonât excite yourself,â says the doctor; âin your present condition it would be dangerous.â âThen be so good as to go to the devil!â says my gentleman. âI will!â says the doctor, anâ off âe goes. âHi, there, you,â says my gentleman, callinâ to me as soon as we were alone, âthis accursed business âas played the devil with me, anâ I need a servant. âOw much do you want to stay wiâ me?â âTwenty-five shillinâ a week,â says I, doinâ myself proud while I âad the chance. âIâll give ye thirty,â says âe; âwotâs ye name?â âJacob Trimble, sir,â says I. âAnâ a most accursed name it is! âIâll call you Parks,â says âe, âanâ when I ring let no one answer but yourself. You can go, Parksâanâ, Parksâget me another doctor.â Well,â pursued the Postilion, seating himself near by, âweâd been there a couple oâ weeks, anâ though âe was better, anâ âis face near well again, âe still kept to âis room, when, one day, a smart phaeton anâ blood âosses drives up, anâ out steps a fine gentlemanâone oâ them pale, sleepy sort. I was a-standinâ in the yard, brushinâ my masterâs coatâa bottle-green wiâ silver buttons, each button âavinâ what they calls a monneygram stamped onto it. âHa, me man!â says the sleepy gent, steppinâ up to me, âa fine coatâdoocid fashionable cut, curse me!âyour masterâs?â âYes, sir,â says I, brushinâ away. âSilver buttons too!â says the gent, âlet me seeâah yes!âa V, yes, to be sureââave the goodness to step to your master anâ say as a gentleman begs to see âim.â âCanât be done, sir,â says I; âme master ainât seeinâ nobody, beinâ in indifferent âealth.â âNonsense!â says the gentleman, yawninâ anâ slippinâ a guinea into me âand. âJust run, like a good feller, anâ tell âim as I bear a message from George!â âFrom âoo?â says I. âFrom George,â says the gent, smilinâ anâ yawninâââjust say from George.â So, to come to the end of it, up I goes, anâ finds me master walkinâ up anâ down anâ aswearinâ to âisself as usual. âA gentleman to see you, sir,â says I. âWhy, devil burn your miserable carcass!â say âe, âdidnât I tell you as Iâd see nobody?â âAy, but this âere gentâs a-sayinâ âe âas a message from George, sir.â My master raised both clenched fists above âis âead anâ sworeâah! better than Iâd heard for many a long day. âOwsâever, downstairs âe goes, cursinâ on every stair. In a time âe comes back. âParks,â says âe, âdo you remember thatâthat place where we got lostâin the storm, Parks?â âAh, sir,â says I. âWell, go there at once,â says âe,â anâ,ââwellââe give me certain ordersâjumps into the phaeton wiâ the sleepy gentleman, anâ they drive off togetherâanâ accordinâ to ordersââere I am.â
âA very interesting story!â said I. âAnd so you are a groom now?â
âAh!âanâ you are a blacksmith, eh?â
âYes.â
âWell, if it donât beat everything as ever I heardâIâm a stiff âun, thatâs all!â
âWhat do you mean?â
âI means my droppinâ in on you, like this âere, just as if you wasnât the one man in all England as I was âopeful to drop in on.â
âAnd you find me very busy!â said I.
âLord love me!â said the Postilion, combing his hair so very hard that it wrinkled his brow. âI comes up from Tonbridge this âere very afternoon, anâ, âavinâ drunk a pint over at âThe Bullâ yonder, anâ axed questions as none oâ they chawbacons could give a answer to, I âears the chink oâ your âammer, anâ cominâ over âere, chance like, I findsâyou; Iâll be gormed if it ainât aâmost onnatâral!â
âAnd why?â
ââCos you was the very i-dentical chap as I come up from Tonbridge to find.â
âWere you sent to find me?â
âEasy a bitâyouâre a blacksmith, aânât you?â
âI told you so before.â
âWotâs more, you looks a blacksmith in that there leather apron, anâ wiâ your face all smutty. To be sure, youâre powerful like âimâNumber One as wasâmy master as now isââ
âDid he send you to find me?â
âSome folks might take you for a gentleman, meetinâ you offâand like, but I knows different.â
âAs how?â
âWell, I never âeard of a gentleman turninâ âisself into a blacksmith, afore, for one thingââ
âStill, one might,â I ventured.
âNo,â answered the Postilion, with a decisive shake of the head, âitâs agâinâ naturâ; when a gentleman gets down in the world, anâ âas to do summâat for a livinâ, âe generally shoots âisselfâah! anâ Iâve knowed âem do it too! Anâ then Iâve noticed as you donât swear, nor yet curseânot even a damn.â
âSeldom,â said I; âbut what of that?â
âIâve seed a deal oâ the quality in my time, one way or another âmanyâs the fine gentleman as Iâve druv, or groomed for, anâ never a one on âem as didnât curse meâah!â said the Postilion, sighing and shaking his head, ââow they did curse me!ââspecially oneâa young lordâoncommon fond oâ me âe were too, in âis way, to the day âis âoss fell anâ rolled on âim. âJacob,â says âe, short like, for âe were agoinâ fast. âJacob!â says âe, âdamn your infernally ugly mug!â says âe; âyou bet me as that cursed brute would do for me.â âI did, my lord,â says I, anâ I remember as the tears was a-runninâ down all our faces as we carried âim along on the five-barred gate, that beinâ âandiest. âWell, devil take your soul, you was right, Jacob, anâ be damned to you!â says âe; âyouâll find a tenner in my coat pocket âere, youâve won it, for I shaânât last the day out, Jacob.â Anâ âe didnât either, for âe died afore we got âim âome, anâ left me a âundred pound in âis will. Ah! gentlemen as is gents is all the same. Lord love you! there never was one on âem but damned my legs, or my liver, or the chaise, or the âosses, or the road, or the inns, or all on âem together. If you was to strip me as naked as the palm oâ your âand, anâ to strip a lord, or a earl, or a gentleman as naked as the palm oâ your âand, anâ was to place us side by side âwhereâd be the difference? Weâre both men, both flesh and blood, aânât we?âthen where âd be the difference? âOoâs to tell which is the lord anâ which is the postilion?â
âWho indeed?â said I, setting down my hammer. âJack is often as good as his masterâand a great deal better.â
âWhy, nobody!â nodded the Postilion, ânot a soul till we opened our mouths; anâ then âtwould be easy enough, for my lord, or earl, or gentleman, beinâ naked, anâ not likinâ it (which would only be natâral), would fall a-swearinâ âeavens âard, damning everybody anâ cursinâ everything, anâ never stop to think, while Iânot beinâ born to itâshould stand there a-shiverinâ anâ tryinâ a curse or two myself, maybeâbut Lord! mine wouldnât amount to nothinâ at all, me not beinâ natârally gifted, nor yet born to itâanâ this brings me round to âer!â
âHer?â
âAhââer! Number Twoââer as quarrelled wiâ Number One all the way from Londonââer as run away from Number Oneâwot aboutââer?â Here he fell to combing his hair again with his whip-handle, while his quick, bright eyes dodged from my face to the glowing forge and back again, and his clean-shaven lips pursed themselves in a soundless whistle. And, as I watched him, it seemed to me that this was the question that had been in his mind all along.
âSeeing she did manage to run away from himâNumber Oneâshe is probably very well,â I answered.
âAhâto be sure! very well, you say?âah, to be sure!â said the Postilion, apparently lost in contemplation of the bellows; âanâ âwhere might she be, now?â
âThat I am unable to tell you,â said I, and began to blow up the fire while the Postilion watched me, sucking the handle of his whip reflectively.
âYou work oncommon âardâdrownd me if you donât!â
âPretty hard!â I nodded.
âAnâ gets well paid for it, pârâaps?â
âNot so well as I could wish,â said I.
âNot so well as âe could wish,â nodded the Postilion, apparently addressing the sledge-hammer, for his gaze was fixed upon it. âOf course notâthe âarder a man works the
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