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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CHAPTER XLIV
THE BOW STREET RUNNERS
It was toward evening of the next day that the door of my prison was opened, and two men entered. The first was a tall, cadaverous-looking individual of a melancholy cast of feature, who, despite the season, was wrapped in a long frieze coat reaching almost to his heels, from the pocket of which projected a short staff, or truncheon. He came forward with his hands in his pockets, and his bony chin on his breast, looking at me under the brim of a somewhat weather-beaten hatâthat is to say, he looked at my feet and my hands and my throat and my chin, but never seemed to get any higher.
His companion, on the contrary, bustled forward, and, tapping me familiarly on the shoulder, looked me over with a bright, appraising eye.
âSâelp me, Jeremy!â said he, addressing his saturnine friend, âsâelp me, if I ever see a pore misfortânate cove more to my mind anâ fancyânice anâ tall anâ straight-leggedâtwelve stone if a poundâa five-foot drop nowâor say five foot six, anâ âeâll go off as sweet as a bird; ah! youâll never feel it, my coveyânot a twinge; a leetle tightish round the windpipe, pârâapsâbut, Lord, itâs soon over. Youâre lookinâ a bit pale round the gills, young cove, but, Lord! thatâs only natâral too.â Here he produced from the depths of a capacious pocket something that glittered beneath his agile fingers. âAnd âow might be your general âealth, young cove?â he went on affably, âbobbish, I âopeâfair anâ bobbish?â As he spoke, with a sudden, dexterous motion, he had snapped something upon my wrists, so quickly that, at the contact of the cold steel, I started, and as I did so, something jingled faintly.
âThere!â he exclaimed, clapping me on the shoulder again, but at the same time casting a sharp glance at my shackled wrists ââthereânow weâre all âappy anâ comfortable! I see as youâre a cove as takes things nice anâ quiet, anââso long as you doâIâm your friendâBobâs my name, anâ bobbish is my naturâ. Lord!âthe way Iâve seen misfortânate coves take on at sight oâ them âbraceletsâ is something out-rageous! But youâwhy, youâre a different kidneyâyouâre my kind, you are what do you say, Jeremy?â
âDonât like âis eye!â growled that individual.
âDonât mind Jeremy,â winked the other; âitâs just âis per-werseness. Lord! âe is the per-wersest codger you ever see! Why, âe finds fault wiâ the Pope oâ Rome, jest because âeâs in the âabit oâ lettinâ coves kiss âis toeâIâve âeard Jeremy work âisself up over the Pope anâ a pint oâ porter, till youâd âave thoughtââ
âAinât we never a-goinâ to start?â inquired Jeremy, staring out of the window, with his back to us.
âAnd where,â said I, âwhere might you be taking me?â
âWhy, since you ax, my covey, we âm a-takinâ you where youâll be took good care on, where youâll feed well, and âave justice done on youâtrust us for that. Though, to be sure, Iâm sorry to take you from such proper quarters as these âereânice and airyâeh, Jeremy?â
âAh!âanâ wiâ a fine view oâ the graves!â growled Jeremy, leading the way out.
In the street stood a chaise and four, surrounded by a pushing, jostling throng of men, women, and children, who, catching sight of me between the Bow Street Runners, forgot to push and jostle, and stared at me with every eye and tooth they possessed, until I was hidden in the chaise.
âRight away!â growled Jeremy, shutting the door with a bang.
âWhoa!â roared a voice, and a great, shaggy golden head was thrust in at the window, and a hand reached down and grasped mine.
âA pipe anâ âbaccy, Peterâfrom me; a flask oâ rumâSimonâs best, from Simon; anâ chicken sang-widges, from my Prue.â This as he passed in each article through the window. âAnâ I were to say, Peter, as we are all wiâ youâever anâ ever, anâ I were likewise to tell âee as âow Prueâll pray for âee oftener than before, anâ âecod!â he broke off, the tears running down his face, âthere were a lot more, but Iâve forgot it all, only, Peter, me anâ Simon be goinâ to get a lawyer chap for âee, anââoh, man, Peter, say the word, anâ Iâll have âee out oâ this in a twinklinâ anâ weâll run for itââ
But, even as I shook my head, the postboyâs whip cracked, and the horses plunged forward.
âGood-by, George!â I cried, âgood-by, dear fellow!â and the last I saw of him was as he stood rubbing his tears away with one fist and shaking the other after the chaise.
CHAPTER XLV
WHICH CONCERNS ITSELF, AMONG OTHER MATTERS, WITH THE BOOTS OF THE SATURNINE JEREMY
âA bottle oâ rum!â said the man Bob, and taking it up, very abstracted of eye, he removed the cork, sniffed at it, tasted it, took a gulp, and handed it over to his companion, who also looked at, sniffed at, and tasted it. âAnd what dâye make oâ that, Jeremy?â
âTasted better afore now!â growled Jeremy, and immediately took another pull.
âSang-widges, too!â pursued the man Bob, in a ruminating tone, âanâ I always was partial to chicken!â and, forthwith, opening the dainty parcel, he helped himself, and his companion also.
âWhat dâye make oâ them, Jeremy?â he inquired, munching.
âIâve eat wuss!â rumbled Jeremy, also munching.
âYoung cove, they does you credit,â said the man Bob, nodding to me with great urbanity, âgreat creditâthere ainât many misfortânates as can per-jooce such sang-widges as them, though, to be sure, they eats uncommon quick âold âard there, Jeremyââ But, indeed, the sandwiches were already only a memory, wherefore his brow grew black, and he glared at the still munching Jeremy, who met his looks with his usual impenetrable gloom.
âA pipe and âbacca!â mused the man Bob, after we had ridden some while in silence, and, with the same serene unconsciousness of manner, he took the pipe, filled it, lighted it, and puffed with an air of dreamy content.
âJeremy is a good-ish sort,â he began, with a complacent flourish of the pipe, âa good-ish sort, but cross-grainedâLord! young cove, âis cross-grainedness is ekalled only by âis per-werseness, and âcause why?ââcause âe donât smokeâ(go easy wiâ the rum, Jeremy!) thereâs nothinâ like a pipe oâ âbacca to soothe such things away (I got my eye on ye, Jeremy!)âno, thereâs nothinâ like a pipe oâ âbacca. Look at meâI were the per-wersest infant that ever was, till I took to smokinâ, and to-day, whatever I am, I ainât per-werse, nor yet cross-grained, and many a misfortânate cove, as is now no moreââas wept over me at partinâââ
âThey generally always do!â growled Jeremy, uncorking the rum-bottle with his teeth.
âNo, Jerry, no,â returned the other, blowing out a cloud of smoke; âmisfortânates ainât all the sameâ(arter you wiâ that bottle!)âyou âave Cryers, and Laughers, and Pray-ers, and Silent Ones, and the silent coves is the dangerousestâ(arter you wiâ the bottle, Jeremy!)ânow you, my covey,â he went on, tapping my hand gently with his pipe-stem, âyou ainât exactly talkative, in factânot wishinâ no offense, I might say as you was inclined to be one oâ the Silent Ones. Not as I âolds that againâ youâfar from it, only you reminds me of a young cove as âad the misfortân to get âisself took for forgery, and whoâarter me a-talkinâ and a-chattinâ to âim in my pleasant way went and managed to commit sooicideâunder my very noseâwhich were âardly nice, or even respectable, considerinââ(arter you wiâ the bottle, Jeremy!)â
Jeremy growled, held up the bottle to the failing light of evening, measured its contents with his thumb, and extended it unwillingly towards his comradeâs ready hand; but it never got there, for, at that instant, the chaise lurched violentlyâthere was a cry, a splintering of glass, a crash, and I was lying, half stunned, in a ditch, listening to the chorus of oaths and cries that rose from the cloud of dust where the frightened horses reared and plunged.
How long I remained thus I cannot say, but, all at once, I found myself upon my feet, running down the road, for, hazy though my mind yet was, I could think only of escape, of liberty, and freedomâat any priceâat any cost. So I ran on down the road, somewhat unsteadily as yet, because my fall had been a heavy one, and my brain still reeled. I heard a shout behind meâthe sharp crack of a pistol, and a bullet sang over my head; and then I knew they were after me, for I could hear the patter of their feet upon the hard road.
Now, as I ran, my brain cleared, but this only served me to appreciate the difficulty of eluding men so seasoned and hardy as my pursuers; moreover, the handcuffs galled my wrists, and the short connecting chain hampered my movements considerably, and I saw that, upon this straight level, I must soon be run down, or shot from behind.
Glancing back, I beheld them some hundred yards, or so, away, elbows in, heads up, running with that long, free stride that speaks of endurance. I increased the pace, the ground flew beneath me, but, when I glanced again, though the man Bob had dropped back, the saturnine Jeremy ran on, no nearer, but no farther than before.
Now, as I went, I presently espied that for which I had looked âa gate set in the midst of the hedge, but it was closed, and never did a gate, before or since, appear quite so high and insurmountable; but, with the desperation of despair, I turned, ran at it, and sprang, swinging my arms above my head as I did so. My foot grazed the top barâdown I came, slipped, stumbled, regained my balance, and ran on over the springy turf. I heard a crash behind me, an oath, a second pistol barked, and immediately it seemed that a hot iron seared my forearm, and glancing down, I saw the skin cut and bleeding, but, finding it no worse, breathed a sigh of thankfulness, and ran on.
By that leap I had probably gained some twenty yards; I would nurse my strength, therefore. If I could once gain the woods! How far off were they?âhalf-a-mile, a mile?âwell, I could run that easily, thanks to my hardy life. Stay! what was that sound behind meâthe fall of flying feet, or the throbbing of my own heart? I turned my head; the man Jeremy was within twelve yards of meâlean and spare, his head thrust forward, he ran with the long, easy stride of a greyhound.
So it was to be a question of endurance? Well, I had caught my second wind by now. I set my teeth, and, clenching my fists, lengthened my stride.
And now, indeed, the real struggle began. My pursuer had long ago abandoned his coat, but his boots were heavier and clumsier than those I wore; but then, again, my confining shackles seemed to contract my chest; and the handcuffs galled my wrists cruelly.
On I went, scattering flocks of scampering sheep, past meditative cows who started up, puffing out snorts of perfume; scrambling through hedges, over gate and stile and ditch, with eyes upon the distant woods full of the purple gloom of evening, and, in my ears, the muffled thud! thud! thud! thud! of the pursuit, sometimes seeming much nearer, and sometimes much farther off,
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