Run to Earth by Mary Elizabeth Braddon (ready player one ebook TXT) đź“•
Other people were taking very little notice of the singer. The regularpatrons of the 'Jolly Tar' were accustomed to her beauty and hersinging, and thought very little about her. The girl was very quiet,very modest. She came and went under the care of the old blind pianist,whom she called her grandfather, and she seemed to shrink alike fromobservation or admiration.
She began to sing again presently.
She stood by the piano, facing the audience, calm as a statue, with herlarge black eyes looking straight before her. The old man listened toher eagerly, as he played, and nodded fond approval every now and then,as the full, rich
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Lady Eversleigh clasp her hands before her face, and stand for a few
moments, motionless and statue-like, as if abandoned to despair.
“What does it all mean?” Miss Graham asked herself. “Surely she cannot
intend to elope with this Carrington. She may be wicked; but she cannot
be so insane as to throw away wealth and position for the sake of this
foreign adventurer.”
She waited, almost breathless with excitement, crouching amongst the
brushwood at the top of the woody bank, and looking downward towards
the fir-grove, with watchful eyes. She had not to wait long. Victor
appeared in a few minutes, out of breath from running.
“Have you given orders about the carriage?”
“Yes, I have given all necessary orders.”
No more was said. Victor handed Lady Eversleigh into the vehicle, and
drove away—slowly while they were still on the edge of the wood; but
accelerating his pace as they emerged upon the moorland.
“It is an elopement!” exclaimed Miss Graham, whose astonishment was
unbounded. “It is an elopement! The infamous creature has gone off
with that penniless young man. And now, Sir Oswald, I think you will
have good reason to repent your fine romantic marriage with a base-born
adventuress, whom nobody ever heard of until she burst forth upon the
world as Lady Eversleigh of Raynham Castle.”
Filled with the triumphant delight of gratified malice, Lydia Graham
went back to the broad greensward by the Wizard’s Cave. The gentlemen
had now left the marquee; the full moon was rising, round and yellow,
on the horizon, like a great globe of molten gold. Preparations had
already commenced for the return, and the younger members of the party
were busy discussing the arrangements of the homeward drive.
That moonlight drive was looked forward to as one of the chief
pleasures of the excursion; it would afford such glorious opportunities
for flirtation. It would enable romantic young ladies to quote so much
poetry about the moon and the summer night, while poetically-disposed
young gentlemen replied in the same strain. All was animation and
excitement. The champagne and burgundy, the sparkling hock and moselle,
which had been consumed in the marquee, had only rendered the majority
of the gentlemen more gallant and agreeable; and softly-spoken
compliments, and tender pressures of pretty little delicately-gloved
hands, testified to the devotion of the cavaliers who were to escort
the band of fair ones homeward.
Lydia Graham hoped that she would be able to take up the thread of her
flirtation with Lord Howden exactly where it had dropped when she had
risen to leave the dinner-table. She had thought it even possible that,
if she could secure a t�te-�-t�te drive home with the weak-brained
young nobleman, she might lure him on until he made a formal proposal,
from which he would find it no easy matter to recede; for Captain
Graham was at his sister’s call, and was a gentleman of no very
yielding temper where his own interests were at stake. He had long been
anxious that his sister should make a wealthy marriage, for her debts
and difficulties annoyed him; and he felt that if she were well
married, he would be able to borrow money of her, instead of being
pestered by her applications for assistance.
Miss Graham was doomed to endure a disappointment. Lord Sumner Howden
was one of the few gentleman upon whom iced champagne and moselle had
produced anything but an exhilarating effect. He was dull and stupid,
pallid and sleepy; like some great, greedy schoolboy who has over-eaten himself, and is suffering the consequences of his gluttony.
The fair Lydia had the mortification of hearing him tell one of the
grooms to put him into a close carriage, where he could have a nap on
his way home.
Reginald Eversleigh took the lordling’s seat in the barouche, which was
the first in the line of carriages for the homeward journey, in spite
of Honoria’s entreaties to Victor Carrington. The young man was almost
as dull and stupid, to all appearance, as Lord Sumner Howden; but,
although he had been drinking deeply, intoxication had nothing to do
with his gloomy silence.
He knew that Carrington’s scheme had been ripening day by day; and he
knew also that within a few hours the final blow was to be struck. He
did not know the nature of that intended stroke of treachery; but he
was aware that it would involve misery and humiliation for Sir Oswald,
utter ruin and disgrace for Honoria. The very uncertainty as to the
nature of the cruel plot made it all the more dreadful; and he waited
with no very pleasant feelings for the development of his friend’s
scheme.
When all was ready for the start, it was discovered that “dear Lady
Eversleigh” was missing. Servants were sent in every direction to
search for her; but with no avail. Sir Oswald was also missed; but
Plummer, the old groom, informed Mr. Eversleigh that his uncle had left
some hours before; and as some of the party had seen the baronet leave
the dinner-table, in compliance with a sudden summons, this occasioned
little surprise.
The next person missed was Victor Carrington. It was Lydia who drew
attention to the fact of his absence.
The party waited an hour, while search for Lady Eversleigh was renewed
in every direction, while many of the guests expressed their fears that
something must have happened to her—that she had wandered too far,
and lost her way in the wood—or that she had missed her footing on
the edge of one of the deep pools by the cavern, and had fallen into
the water—or that she had been attacked by ruffians.
But in due time it was discovered that Mr. Carrington had been seen to
take a gig from amongst the vehicles; and a lad, who had been in charge
of the gig and the horse belonging to it, told the other servants that
Mr. Carrington had said he wanted the vehicle to drive Lady Eversleigh
home. She was tired, Mr. Carrington had said, and wanted to go home
quietly.
This information was brought to Reginald by one of the upper servants;
and the question of Lady Eversleigh’s disappearance being at once set
at rest, the procession of carriages moved away in the moonlight.
“It was really too bad of dear Lady Eversleigh to give us such
unnecessary alarm,” said Lydia Graham.
The lady who had taken the second place in the barouche agreed with
this remark.
“I never was more alarmed in my life,” she said. “I felt sure that
something very dreadful must have happened.”
“And to think that Lady Eversleigh should prefer going home in a gig,”
said Lydia, maliciously; “for my part, I think a gig a most unpleasant
vehicle.”
The other lady whispered something about Lady Eversleigh’s humble
extraction, and her ignorance of the usages of society.
“You can’t wonder at it, my dear,” she murmured. “For my part, I was
surprised to see her so much at her ease in her new position. But, you
see, her ignorance has now betrayed her into a terrible breach of the
proprieties. Her conduct is, to say the least of it, most eccentric;
and you may depend, no one here will ever forget this ride home in a
gig with that clever young surgeon. I don’t suppose Sir Oswald will
very much approve of such conduct.”
“Nor I,” said Lydia, in the same subdued tone. “Poor Sir Oswald! What
could he expect when he disgraced himself by such a marriage?”
Reginald Eversleigh leaned back in the carriage, with his arum folded,
and his eyes fixed on vacancy, while the ladies gossipped in whispers.
*
CHAPTER IX.
ON YARBOROUGH TOWER.
No sooner had Victor Carrington got completely clear of the wood, than
he drove his horse at a gallop.
The light gig swayed from side to side, and jolted violently several
times on crossing some obstruction in the way.
“You are not afraid?” asked Victor.
“I am only afraid of delay,” answered Honoria, calmly; for by this time
she had recovered much of her ordinary firmness, and was prepared to
face her sorrow with at least outward tranquillity. “Tell me, Mr.
Carrington, have you reason to think that my husband is in great
danger?”
“I can tell you nothing for certain. You know how stupid the country
people are. The boy who brought the message told me that the gentleman
had been thrown from his horse, and was very much hurt. He was
insensible, and was injured about the head. I gathered from this, and
from the boy’s manner, rather than his words, that the injuries were
very serious.”
“Why was Sir Oswald taken to such a wretched place as a ruined tower?”
“Because the accident happened near the ruin; and your husband was
found by the people who have charge of the tower.”
“And could they take him to no better place?”
“No. There is no habitation of any kind within three miles.”
No more was said. It was not very easy to talk while flying through the
air at the utmost speed of a spirited horse.
The moon bathed the broad moorland in mellow light. The wide expanse of
level turf looked like a sea of black water that had suddenly been
frozen into stillness. Not a tree—not a patch of brushwood, or a
solitary bush—broke the monotony of the scene: but far away against
the moonlit horizon rose a wild and craggy steep, and on the summit of
that steep appeared a massive tower, with black and ruined battlements,
that stood out grimly against the luminous sky.
This was Yarborough Tower—a stronghold that had defied many a
besieging force in the obscure past; but of the origin of which little
was now known.
Victor Carrington drove the gig up a rough and narrow road that curved
around the sides of the craggy hill, and wound gradually towards the
top.
He was obliged to drive slowly here, and Lady Eversleigh had ample
leisure to gaze upwards at the dreary-looking ruin, whose walls seemed
more densely black as they grew nearer and nearer.
“What a horrible place!” she murmured. “To think of my husband lying
there—with no better shelter than those ruined walls in the hour of
his suffering.”
Honoria Eversleigh looked around her with a shudder, as the gig passed
across a narrow wooden drawbridge that spanned an enormous chasm in the
craggy hill-side.
She looked up at the tower. All was dark, and the dismal cry of a raven
suddenly broke the awful stillness with a sound that was even yet more
awful.
“Why are there no lights in the windows?” she asked; “surely Sir Oswald
is not lying in the darkness?”
“I don’t know. The chamber in which they have placed him may be on the
other side of the tower,” answered Victor, briefly. “And now, Lady
Eversleigh, you must alight. We can go no further with the vehicle, and
I must take it back to the other side of the drawbridge.”
They had reached the entrance of the tower, an archway of solid
masonry, over which the ivy hung like a sombre curtain.
Honoria alighted, and passed under the black shadow of the arch.
“You had better wait till I return, Lady Eversleigh,” said Victor. “You
will scarcely find your way without my help.”
Honoria obeyed. Anxious as she was to reach Sir Oswald without a
moment’s unnecessary delay, she felt herself powerless to proceed
without a guide—so dark was the interior of the tower. She heard
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